Articles by "ICE"
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My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.

 

senate-confirms-markwayne-mullin-dhs-secretary-trump-pick

The U.S. Senate has officially confirmed Markwayne Mullin as Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, solidifying his transition from Capitol Hill to one of the most critical roles in the federal government.

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Donald Trump had previously selected Mullin for the position, and the Senate’s vote on Monday night finalizes that decision, placing him in charge of an agency central to national security and immigration enforcement.

Mullin steps in to replace Kristi Noem, whose tenure faced significant scrutiny. His confirmation comes at a challenging time, as DHS continues to navigate the pressures of an ongoing federal shutdown and heightened focus on border security.

As the new DHS Secretary, Mullin will oversee key agencies including Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), putting him at the center of the administration’s immigration policies and enforcement strategy.

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Taking charge during a government shutdown, Mullin faces immediate operational and political challenges, from workforce shortages to ongoing national debates over immigration policy. His tenure begins under intense scrutiny, with both supporters and critics watching closely.

His leadership is expected to play a major role in shaping the direction of U.S. homeland security efforts in the months ahead.

My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.
ice-agents-deployed-us-airports-tsa-staffing-shortage-travel-delays

In a dramatic response to growing travel disruptions across the United States, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have been deployed to several major airports—including Atlanta, New Orleans, Phoenix, and New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport—to help manage severe staffing shortages within the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).


Why ICE Agents Are Now at Airports

The move comes amid an ongoing federal government shutdown that has left thousands of TSA workers unpaid for weeks. As financial strain intensifies, many officers have called in sick or resigned altogether, triggering widespread staffing shortages and chaos at airport security checkpoints. 

Airports in key travel hubs like Atlanta and New Orleans have reported hours-long security lines, with some passengers missing flights due to delays. The crisis has been especially disruptive during peak travel periods, amplifying pressure on federal agencies to act quickly. 

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Role of ICE Agents in Airport Operations

Federal officials say ICE agents are not replacing TSA officers but are instead assisting with logistical duties such as:

  • Managing passenger flow
  • Controlling crowds at security lines
  • Supporting general airport operations

They are not responsible for screening luggage or conducting security checks, as those tasks require specialized TSA training. 


Controversy and Public Reaction

The deployment has sparked nationwide debate. Critics—including federal worker unions and lawmakers—argue that ICE agents lack the proper training for aviation security and warn the move could create safety risks rather than solve them. 

Others have raised concerns about the presence of immigration enforcement officers in civilian travel spaces, fearing it could create anxiety among passengers, particularly immigrants and international travelers.

However, some travelers have expressed support, saying any additional manpower is welcome amid long lines and mounting frustration.

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Political Tensions Fueling the Crisis

At the heart of the situation is a broader political standoff in Washington over funding for the Department of Homeland Security. The deadlock has left TSA operations strained, with more than 400 officers reportedly quitting and absentee rates climbing sharply at major airports. 

The deployment of ICE agents is widely seen as a temporary fix while lawmakers continue negotiations, though no immediate resolution appears in sight.


What This Means for Travelers

Passengers flying through affected airports should expect:

  • Longer wait times at security checkpoints
  • Increased federal presence in terminals
  • Potential delays and schedule disruptions

Travelers are advised to arrive earlier than usual and stay updated with airline notifications as the situation continues to evolve.

My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.
ice-paid-bonuses-for-every-detention-even-when-arrests-are-later-found-to-be-mistakes

In the midst of one of the most aggressive immigration enforcement campaigns in recent U.S. history, new data paints a revealing picture: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has dramatically increased arrests as part of a broader strategy that includes performance incentives, controversial tactics, and expanded enforcement goals. 


A Record Break in Interior Enforcement

Data released late last year shows that ICE’s daily arrest figures have climbed sharply — from an average of roughly 300 arrests per day in early 2024 to more than 1,000 per day in recent months. These figures represent a significant departure from prior enforcement patterns and indicate an escalation in interior immigration operations targeting people beyond traditional border enforcement. 

ICE Paid Bonuses for Every Detention — Even When Arrests Are Later Found to Be Mistakes

Critics argue this is partly the result of new internal targets set by the Trump administration, which have pushed field offices to prioritize volume in detentions and arrests. Though the official daily quota of 3,000 arrests has not been consistently met, the push to increase numbers has reshaped enforcement priorities nationwide. 


Incentivizing Arrests: The Bonus Controversy

At the center of the debate is the notion — reported by multiple outlets — that ICE considered financial bonuses as part of recruitment and retention strategies tied to deportation performance. In 2025, an internal memo circulating within ICE outlined a pilot plan offering cash incentives tied to the pace of deportations, although the agency later rescinded the program. 

Under the now-withdrawn pilot, officers could receive hundreds of dollars for processing deportations quickly, a structure critics say could prioritize speed over due process. Though ICE officials later stated that “no such policy is in effect,” the episode revealed the agency’s interest in incentive-driven enforcement. 


Expansion Through Recruitment and Funding

Simultaneously, ICE has rolled out large sign-on bonuses and recruitment incentives to build its workforce, including tens of thousands of dollars for new agents — evidence of the scale and ambition of the current enforcement push. These bonuses are separate from the deportation-linked incentives but reflect a broader strategy of expanding federal capacity to detain and remove immigrants. 

This expansion is backed by substantial federal funding increases under recent immigration legislation. For example, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act includes tens of billions for ICE hiring, detention bed capacity, and deportation enforcement, underscoring how political priorities have reshaped the agency’s mandate. 


Who Is Being Arrested? Beyond “The Worst of the Worst”

Official statements from Homeland Security have emphasized targeting individuals with criminal convictions. Yet independent analyses show that a significant proportion of those detained have no criminal history at all — a shift some advocates link to the push for higher arrest totals rather than public safety outcomes. 

The result: communities across the U.S. have seen immigration enforcement penetrate everyday spaces — workplaces, homes, and routine public areas — sparking legal challenges and civil liberties concerns.


Looking Forward: Policy and Public Response

As lawmakers, civil rights advocates, and immigrant communities assess the impact of these enforcement practices, the debate around ICE’s role, funding, and incentive structures is intensifying. Questions about accountability, transparency, and fairness in immigration enforcement now play a central role in national discussions about border policy and civil rights protections.

My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.
trump-threatens-insurrection-act-minnesota-protests

President Donald Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act—a rarely used federal law that allows deployment of U.S. military forces on American soil—to “put an end” to ongoing protests in Minneapolis, Minnesota, federal and local officials said Thursday. 

The announcement comes as unrest surged after a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent fatally shot a Minneapolis woman and, in a separate incident, wounded a man during an enforcement operation. Critics say the shootings have inflamed tensions, while the administration says the actions were in self‑defense. 


What the President Said and Why It Matters

In a series of posts on Truth Social, Trump accused “professional agitators” of exploiting the protests and said Minnesota leaders have failed to maintain order. He warned that if the state does not curb what he called attacks on federal officers, he would authorize military action under the Insurrection Act to support civil enforcement. 

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The Insurrection Act, passed in 1807, gives a president authority to deploy troops domestically in cases of rebellion or when the execution of federal law is obstructed. Its invocation would mark one of the most significant uses of domestic military power in modern U.S. history. 


Protests and Federal Response

Protests in Minneapolis have grown over the week, with demonstrators demanding accountability and sweeping changes to immigration enforcement practices. Federal agents, including ICE and Department of Homeland Security personnel, have been operating in the region under a broad enforcement initiative that has drawn sharp criticism from city and state officials. 

Local leaders have condemned the federal presence. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey described the situation as “unsustainable” and criticized the aggressive tactics used by federal agents. Meanwhile, state government officials have launched legal challenges, arguing that the federal response violates constitutional rights and civil liberties. 


State vs. Federal Tensions Escalate

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has authorized preparation of the state National Guard and publicly opposed federal military intervention. He warned residents not to let the situation escalate into a justification for federal troop deployment, urging calm and constitutional protections for protestors. 

The governor’s stance has been echoed in court filings as Minnesota, along with the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, pursues litigation against the Department of Homeland Security and its agencies, asserting that federal actions have overstepped legal boundaries. 

trump-threatens-insurrection-act-minnesota-protests


Legal and Political Implications

The potential invocation of the Insurrection Act has sparked debate among legal scholars and political leaders. Some Republicans have urged Trump to take decisive action, while civil liberties advocates warn that deploying troops against protestors could undermine constitutional protections and escalate violence. 

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As the situation unfolds, Pentagon support remains limited to legal and support personnel, and no official troop deployments have yet been confirmed under the act itself. 


What Happens Next

Officials on all sides are watching closely. Trump’s threat raises questions about executive power, the future of federal‑state relations, and the balance between public order and civil liberties. A final decision on whether to invoke the Insurrection Act could come as early as the next few days, depending on developments in Minneapolis and responses from Minnesota’s political leadership. 

My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.
half-of-americans-say-ice-is-making-us-cities-less-safe-new-national-poll-shows

A growing number of Americans believe U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is making cities less safe, not more—a striking shift in public opinion that highlights deepening concerns about the agency’s role in local communities.

According to a recent national survey conducted by CNN, roughly half of U.S. adults now say ICE enforcement practices are contributing to decreased safety in American cities. The findings underscore a widening gap between federal immigration policy and how residents experience public safety on the ground.


Public Safety vs. Immigration Enforcement

For years, federal officials have argued that aggressive immigration enforcement deters crime and enhances security. But many Americans appear unconvinced. Critics say ICE operations—particularly raids, courthouse arrests, and collaboration with local law enforcement—can erode trust, making communities less willing to report crimes or cooperate with police.

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Community advocates and local officials have long warned that fear of detention or deportation can push immigrant residents into the shadows. When witnesses avoid contacting authorities or victims hesitate to seek help, violent and nonviolent crimes alike can go unreported, weakening overall public safety.


Urban Communities Feel the Impact Most

The CNN poll suggests that skepticism toward ICE is especially pronounced in major metropolitan areas, where immigrant populations are larger and enforcement actions are more visible. In these cities, residents often describe a chilling effect on daily life—parents avoiding schools, workers skipping medical care, and neighborhoods becoming more isolated.

Mayors and city councils in several regions have responded by reaffirming or expanding so-called “sanctuary” policies, which limit cooperation between local agencies and federal immigration authorities. Supporters argue these policies allow police to focus on crime prevention rather than immigration status.

half-of-americans-say-ice-is-making-us-cities-less-safe-new-national-poll-shows


Political Divide, Shared Anxiety

While views on ICE remain sharply divided along partisan lines, the poll indicates a notable rise in concern among independents and some moderate voters. This shift suggests that doubts about ICE are no longer confined to activist circles but are entering the mainstream public conversation.

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Even among those who support stricter border controls, there is growing unease about enforcement tactics inside U.S. cities—particularly when they affect long-settled families or individuals with no criminal history.


What This Means Going Forward

Public perception plays a critical role in shaping policy. As more Americans question whether ICE is enhancing or harming safety, pressure is likely to increase on lawmakers to revisit enforcement strategies, oversight mechanisms, and the balance between immigration control and community trust.

With immigration set to remain a central issue in upcoming elections, the message from the public is becoming harder to ignore: for many Americans, safety is not just about enforcement—it’s about trust, stability, and the ability of all residents to live without fear.

My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.
gofundme-ice-officer-renee-good-shooting-policy-controversy

Minneapolis, MN — GoFundMe is drawing intense scrutiny for allowing an online fundraiser connected to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer involved in the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good to remain active, even though the platform’s own policies explicitly ban campaigns tied to violent wrongdoing. 

The campaign — widely shared on social media and drawing thousands of contributors — seeks support for Minnesota ICE agent Jonathan Ross, who authorities say fatally shot Good during an encounter in south Minneapolis earlier this month. Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, was killed on January 7 in a confrontation that has since sparked protests, legal debates, and political outrage. 


Terms of Service Versus Fundraiser Reality

GoFundMe’s Terms of Service clearly state that users may not create fundraisers “intended to support the legal defense of financial or violent crimes, including murder, robbery, assault, battery, s*x crimes or crimes against minors.” 

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Yet the Jonathan Ross campaign — initially titled “ICE OFFICER Jonathan Ross” and purporting to collect funds for his legal support — has amassed hundreds of thousands of dollars. Some backers have described the donations as support for due process, while others explicitly frame the campaign as backing an officer whose actions they believe were justified. 

GoFundMe says its Trust & Safety team is reviewing all shoot­ing-related fundraisers to ensure compliance, and that funds are temporarily held by payment processors during this review. The company told media outlets that any campaign found to violate its rules “will be removed.” 


Billionaire Donation Sparks Firestorm

The controversy heightened when hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman publicly donated $10,000 to the fundraiser for the ICE agent, saying he supports the principle that every person is “innocent until proven guilty.” Ackman also stated he had intended to give to the fundraiser for Good’s family — which raised more than $1.5 million before being closed — but arrived too late to donate. 

Critics argue that accepting money for someone connected to a killing — regardless of legal status — contravenes the platform’s stated commitment to prohibit fundraisers tied to violent wrongdoing. Advocates for platform accountability have urged GoFundMe to enforce its policies consistently, pointing to prior removals of campaigns tied to police shootings. 


Dual Fundraisers Highlight Public Divide

The co-existence of two vastly different fundraising efforts — one for Good’s grieving family and one tied to the agent who shot her — has underscored fierce national divisions over law enforcement, accountability, and narrative framing in high-profile use-of-force cases.

See what's next: Feds Denied Minnesota Officials Access To Investigate ICE Shooting Of Renee Good

Supporters of Good’s family have built a large base of small donors and public sympathy, while the controversial campaign for Ross draws backing largely from ideological allies and as a statement of support for law enforcement personnel. 

As debate intensifies, civil rights advocates, legal experts, and digital watchdogs are calling for transparent enforcement of crowdfunding policies so that rules governing violent-crime fundraisers apply equally to all users — not just to the powerless or unconnected.

My1stAmerica is a bold, citizen-driven media platform dedicated to truth, accountability, and democratic values in America today.
feds-denies-minnesota-officials-access-investigate-ice-shooting-renee-good

Minnesota officials report that federal authorities have blocked state and local investigators from examining the deadly ICE shooting of Renee Nicole Good, a U.S. citizen killed in Minneapolis. The move has ignited national outrage, raising questions about federal overreach, transparency, and accountability in law enforcement.

According to state sources, investigators were denied access to key evidence and eyewitness testimony, hampering their ability to conduct a thorough, independent inquiry. Local leaders argue that this obstruction violates fundamental oversight principles, leaving communities without clarity about the circumstances surrounding the killing.

Renee Good, described by family and neighbors as a mother, daughter, and community member, was fatally shot in what officials now say appears to be an excessive use of force by ICE agents. The inability of local authorities to review the incident has fueled criticism that federal immigration enforcement agencies operate with immunity and minimal accountability, even when lethal force is involved.

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Legal experts warn that blocking state-level investigations undermines the democratic principle that all law enforcement actions are subject to oversight. “If federal agencies can prevent states from examining deadly incidents, there is effectively no mechanism to hold anyone accountable,” said one constitutional law scholar.

Community leaders and activists are calling for urgent reform, including mandatory transparency, body camera disclosures, and independent investigations whenever federal agents are involved in shootings. They argue that such measures are essential to restoring public trust and ensuring that the rights of citizens are protected.

This incident highlights a growing tension between federal authorities and state officials tasked with safeguarding communities. Public safety experts note that without independent oversight, residents lose confidence in law enforcement, particularly marginalized communities who feel targeted by aggressive immigration enforcement policies.

As Minnesota officials continue to push for access, the case has become a flashpoint in the national debate over the balance of power between federal agencies and state governments, raising critical questions about civil liberties, policing, and federal accountability.