New York City, ICE and Tom Homan
Digest more
1don MSN
ICE stepping up operations in NYC over sanctuary city status, White House border czar Tom Homan says
Tom Homan, the White House border czar, said Tuesday that ICE is increasing operations in New York City due to its status as a sanctuary city.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents broke down the door of a Queens family’s home last week in a video released by the New York Immigration Coalition on
FOX 5 New York on MSN
ICE to ramp up operations in NYC, Homan says
Border Czar Tom Homan says he plans to increase immigration enforcement in New York City, saying "I plan on being in New York City in the near future."
The comments came after White House Border Czar Tom Homan said that federal officers would return to New York City.
An NYPD cop impersonated an ICE agent and demanded his victim and their family report to a federal office in New York City, federal prosecutors revealed Tuesday.
The controversial Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency is running a recruitment campaign targeting potentially disgruntled NYPD officers offering them a home that “respects you, your family
Immigration and Customs Enforcement ( ICE) is targeting NYPD officers for recruitment following Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani ’s victory in the race for New York City’s top job. Since Mamdani’s victory, the agency has posted three times on X specifically trying to recruit NYPD officers, indicating a focus on the city’s law enforcement personnel.
ABC7 New York on MSN
New York City Comptroller Brad Lander to fight arrest charge rather than settle case
It comes as President Donald Trump's border czar issued a new warning on Tuesday and said new immigration operations will be taking place in New York City.
Islam faces one count of false impersonation of an officer of the United States, the indictment states. The indictment did not identify Islam as a police officer, but U.S. attorney spokesperson John Marzulli confirmed he is an NYPD sergeant. It’s unclear in the indictment what Islam’s motive was.
Family searches through North Country jail ledgers recall a hidden history that shaped today's ICE detention network.
When masked federal officers showed up on a street corner in Corona, Queens, earlier this month and started arresting Latino men, seemingly stopped at random, volunteers alerted through Signal chats and direct messages rushed to the scene.