News

First migrants arrive at Everglades detention center ‘Alligator Alcatraz,' official says Video captured by NBC6 showed a U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) bus driving into the detention ...
In 2023, the Biden administration introduced a parole program for eligible migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela who agreed to undergo review by U.S. authorities instead of crossing ...
President Trump may have executive prerogative to end his predecessor's humanitarian parole for migrants, but the courts may rule that revoking it for current recipients is a breach of the U.S ...
Home Politics Features Deportations: A crackdown on legal migrants The Supreme Court will allow Trump to revoke protections for over 500,000 immigrants ...
Border patrol agents rescue 17 illegal migrants from Mexico packed into an RV and sedan in sweltering Arizona temperatures this week, arresting a U.S. citizen on human smuggling charges.
Judge rules some migrants deported to El Salvador must be given due process The ruling does not apply to Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Salvadoran native whose deportation became a focal point of ...
Immigration attorneys tell ABC News that federal agents are arresting migrants at immigration courts -- in some cases after their deportation cases have been dismissed.
An eventual return home is an ideal woven into the migration experience. But a trail of migrants leaving the United States under President Donald Trump threatens to exacerbate instability at home.
The Supreme Court clears a path for the Trump administration to start revoking affected migrants’ work authorization.
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum launched "Mexico embraces you' to receive immigrants deported from U.S. Numbers are low, but the 10-center program continues.
US sends 68 migrants back to Honduras and Colombia in first voluntary deportation Experts believe the self-deportation offer will only appeal to a small portion of migrants already considering ...
Meanwhile, Border Patrol’s public spreadsheets of migrant encounter data from that same period reveal that only 79 drug seizures — just under 2% — were from migrants.