Trump, ICE and migrants
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ICE, bond hearings and immigration detention
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The policy shift will apply to all immigrants who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally, no matter when they did so.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention standards are difficult to enforce because they aren’t written into law. Rather than follow a uniform standard, detention centers operate under a patchwork of different standards.
Immigrants who arrive illegally in the U.S. may be detained for months or years as they await a resolution to their immigration cases.
ICE’s new annual budget places the federal agency among the top 20 most well-funded militaries in the world, sitting between Canada, which spent roughly $29.3 billion in 2024, and Turkey, which spent $25 billion last year.
The son, Marine veteran Alejandro Barranco, told Military.com after the arrest that he initially "couldn't believe" the video depicting his father being repeatedly punched in the head by federal agents as they pinned him to the ground.
A group immigrants and legal advocates filed a class-action lawsuit Wednesday that seeks to stop Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers from arresting migrants who appear at immigration courts for previously scheduled hearings and placing them on a fast-track to deportation.
New ICE protocol permits rapid 6-hour deportations to third countries, raising safety and due process concerns.
Under new Trump administration guidance, millions of immigrants who entered the U.S. without legal authorization would have to fight their deportation cases in detention.
"There's never been a time where immigration detention hasn't been deadly, so it's just inevitable that the more people we detain, the more people who are going to die," Anthony Enriquez, the vice president of U.S. advocacy and litigation at RFK Human Rights, told Newsweek.