President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement efforts are in full swing, with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducting raids across the country, including South Florida.
At least 27 agencies across the nation are currently listed as having submitted applications to the program, including agencies in Texas, Georgia, Montana, Oklahoma and Louisiana. Nearly half of the pending applications are from Florida law enforcement agencies.
The United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Office in Miramar saw long lines as people checked to see if their<a class="excerpt-read-more" href=" More
Several operations were carried out by federal officials in South Florida on Sunday, leading to the arrest of alleged undocumented immigrants in Broward County.
Immigrants across South Florida are bracing in anticipation of a wave of Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids ordered by the Trump administration. The big picture: President Trump has already acted on his promise to crack down on undocumented immigrants through large-scale deportation.
Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a memorandum that could soon give highway patrol officers some of the power of federal immigration agents.
MIAMI — Federal agents began rounding up immigrants in South Florida who are in the country illegally over the weekend as the Trump Administration’s nationwide immigration crackdown continues, the U.S. Homeland Security Investigations confirmed.
MIRMAR - Anxious relatives waited outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Miramar on Monday morning waiting for word on their loved ones.
Migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti who came under a temporary humanitarian parole process under the Biden administration could lose their temporary stays and be deported. State of play: Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers were directed last week to expedite the deportation of people who failed to apply for asylum within the one-year deadline.
Some groups have created Know Your Rights and Red Cards as a reminder of what rights immigrants have and how to exercise them if faced with federal agents from ICE or the border patrol.
Some immigrants are worried that routine check-ins with immigration authorities are turning into detention hotspots as the Trump administration ramps up deportations.