HUMSI — Human Security Initiative

Human Impact Project

A living database documenting reported immigration enforcement incidents and their human impact.

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3260 incidents with known locations

Five detained in ICE raids at Madison laundromats, witnesses report use of force

Jul 3, 2026Madison, WI

ICE conducted enforcement operations at two laundromats in southern Madison on Tuesday, July 3, 2026, detaining five people total—three at the Fish Hatchery Road location and two at the Todd Drive location (Little Big Load Laundromat). According to laundromat owners Roger and Nancy Hansen, one detainee was bloodied after being slammed to the floor during the operation. The apprehension at Todd Drive occurred just after 1:45 p.m., with witnesses reporting two or three unidentified men were taken. Madison police reviewed video of the apprehension but were not requested to respond or informed of the operation by ICE. The detentions were part of a broader series of ICE enforcement operations across Wisconsin, with at least 10 people detained in the Madison area and 39 arrested statewide.

Three migrants with US citizen children win right to bond hearing after 90 days of ICE detention

Jul 3, 2026

A divided 2-1 panel of the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on July 3, 2026, that ICE cannot detain individuals for more than 90 days without providing a bond hearing opportunity. The case involved three migrants—two Mexican citizens and one Honduran national—who had each lived in the United States for more than a decade, had no criminal records, and were fathers of U.S. citizen children. All three were detained by ICE following traffic stops in Texas and challenged their continued detention through habeas corpus petitions. The decision, grounded in Fifth Amendment due process protections, contradicts the Trump administration's interpretation of federal immigration law that had allowed mandatory detention of non-citizens without bond hearings. The ruling could affect thousands of people detained in Texas and Louisiana.

West Hartford restaurant owner detained by ICE, released after congressional pressure

Jul 3, 2026West Hartford, CTMontenegro

Seyo Cecunjanin, a West Hartford restaurant and laundry business owner from Montenegro, was arrested by ICE on June 20, 2026, in a Dunkin' Donuts parking lot surrounded by five unmarked vehicles while with two of his sons. He was detained at Wyatt Detention Center in Central Falls, Rhode Island for approximately 12 days. Cecunjanin entered the U.S. in 1997 using a fraudulent passport and had an outstanding removal order, but had been permitted to reenter in 2024 and maintained valid work authorization at the time of his arrest. He owns two restaurants and a laundry business employing 15 people and has a pending permanent resident application filed in September 2023. U.S. Rep. John Larson and U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, along with other members of Connecticut's congressional delegation, held a press conference and sent letters to ICE demanding his release, citing his valid work authorization and pending immigration case. Cecunjanin was released on June 26, 2026 (or July 2, 2026 according to another account).

Three immigrants arrested at Manhattan federal courthouses despite judge's order restricting enforcement

Jul 2, 2026New York, NYEcuador, Guatemala

During a surge in ICE enforcement in late June 2026, three men were arrested at federal courthouses in Lower Manhattan in apparent violation of a federal judge's order issued the previous week restricting courthouse arrests. An Ecuadorian man was arrested at an immigration court inside 26 Federal Plaza, a Guatemalan man at 290 Broadway, and a man from the Dominican Republic was also arrested at 290 Broadway. The arrests occurred during a broader ICE enforcement operation in which the agency detained over 10,000 people in five days after being instructed to make 2,000 arrests per day. Legal advocates with Make the Road New York filed challenges claiming the arrests violated due process rights and court orders prohibiting immigration enforcement in courthouses.

Man arrested on firearm charges released from jail, picked up by ICE after bail posted

Jul 2, 2026New Bedford, MAHonduras

Jose Raul Martinez-Alvarado, 40, from Honduras, was arrested by New Bedford Police on June 7 after officers found him in an apartment where a group of men were fighting and residual cocaine was present. He was charged with possession of a large capacity firearm, carrying a firearm without a license, and resisting arrest. Martinez-Alvarado posted $1,000 bail and was released from Bristol County Jail on June 9. He was then picked up by ICE on July 2. The case became the subject of a public dispute between Bristol County Sheriff Paul Heroux and ICE Boston, after ICE posted on social media that the jail violated federal law by releasing him without honoring an ICE detainer, citing Massachusetts law that prevents law enforcement from holding individuals solely on the basis of immigration status.

Father detained by ICE in Seattle while daughter left in car, neighbors intervene

Instagram📦Social media only
Jul 2, 2026Seattle, WA

An unidentified man was detained by ICE in White Center, Seattle on July 2, 2026. According to a social media account, he was taken into custody from a vehicle while his young daughter was in the backseat. The man's mother arrived to take the child, and bystanders reported she told ICE officers the family had immigration paperwork, but he was detained anyway. Neighbors gathered at the scene, using whistles, recording, and calling 911 in response to the enforcement action.

Mother and child detained by ICE in Houston parking lot

Instagram📦Social media only
Jul 2, 2026Houston, TX

A mother and her child were detained by ICE agents in Houston, Texas on July 2, 2026. According to the post, ICE agents used two vehicles to stop the mother's car in a parking lot near an apartment complex around 2:30 p.m. A video of the incident shows the child pleading for help as her mother was taken into custody.

Trump orders surge in immigration arrests; 10,000+ detained in five days

Jul 2, 2026

The Trump administration secretly ordered a surge in immigration enforcement that resulted in more than 10,000 people being detained in five days, with daily arrest numbers roughly doubling from approximately 1,000 to a new benchmark of 2,000 detentions per day. Border Patrol and ICE agents conducted arrests at routine immigration check-ins, traffic stops, and in public spaces across the country. The detained population in ICE facilities jumped by nearly 4,000 to over 63,000 people as of the article's publication date.

Mexican father arrested by ICE on way to soccer game, separating from family

Jul 2, 2026Salt Lake City, UTMexico

Arturo, a 48-year-old Mexican man, was arrested by ICE in Salt Lake City on Sunday, June 30, 2026, while on his way to a soccer game. His wife Veronica reported the arrest shattered their family. According to immigration attorney Ysabel Lonazco in Utah, the detention occurred during a broader ICE enforcement surge in late June.

Nicaraguan father arrested at routine ICE check-in despite scheduled 2027 court date

Jul 2, 2026Miami, FLNicaragua

A Nicaraguan father of two children was arrested by ICE during a routine check-in appointment on Monday, despite having an immigration court hearing already scheduled for 2027, according to his immigration attorney Cindy Blandon in Miami. The arrest occurred during a surge in which ICE detained more than 10,000 people over five days following White House directives to increase enforcement operations.

Mexican man detained by ICE despite military parole, family fights for release

Jul 2, 2026Rio Grande Valley, TXMexico

Victor Luna Lopez, a Mexican national residing in the U.S. since 2004, was detained by ICE while working as a roofer after agents observed workers on a private property roof using a drone and conducted document verification. Luna Lopez holds military parole status due to his daughter's active service in the U.S. military, which his family and attorney argue should protect him from detention. He is being held at El Valle Detention Center while his family pursues legal action and public support for his release.

ICE officer held in contempt for moving detainees across state lines despite court orders

Jul 2, 2026Cedar Rapids, IA

Two federal judges in Iowa held ICE Supervisory Detention and Deportation Officer Quintin Erdman in civil contempt for knowingly and willfully transferring detainee Pardeep Saini from Iowa to Nebraska in direct violation of a court order blocking such transfers. In a separate case, detainee Osmar Jose Arraiz Montilla was transferred between federal judicial districts while his case was pending. The judges sharply criticized ICE officials for a pattern of repeatedly violating court orders in immigration cases, with one judge warning that noncitizens are not 'bargaining chips' to be moved based on litigation strategy.

PHR and UC Berkeley document 412 incidents of crowd-control weapons misuse against immigration enforcement protesters across 13 states

July 2026United StatesUnited States

Physicians for Human Rights and the Human Rights Center at UC Berkeley documented 412 incidents where federal and local agencies misused crowd-control weapons against demonstrators protesting immigration enforcement from June 2025 through May 2026. The incidents occurred across 16 cities in 13 states. DHS agents were responsible for 265 incidents (64%), with state and local agencies responsible for 123 (30%). Victims included 209 demonstrators, 177 journalists, 12 minors, 7 bystanders, and 4 healthcare workers or legal observers. Of 412 incidents, 119 involved documented injuries including 19 traumatic brain injuries, 12 fractures, 10 ocular injuries, 7 permanent disabilities, 1 partial hand amputation, and 1 hearing loss. The report found 86% of incidents occurred during four named DHS operations: At Large (Los Angeles), Midway Blitz (Chicago), Black Rose (Portland), and Metro Surge (Minneapolis).

Anti-ICE activists plead not guilty to federal conspiracy charges in Minneapolis

Jul 1, 2026Minneapolis, MN

Fourteen anti-ICE protesters affiliated with Direct Action Minnesota and the Black Cat Workers' Collective pleaded not guilty in federal court to charges of conspiring to impede immigration enforcement officers in Minnesota. The group is accused of tracking officers and setting up blockades around the Whipple Federal Building. A 15th defendant, Kyle Wagner, remains jailed after being charged in February. The court proceedings focused on managing discovery of 20 terabytes of evidence, primarily Signal chat messages between defendants.

Immigration protest organizer Jeane Wong sentenced to home detention after guilty plea in apartment complex incident

Jul 1, 2026San Diego, CA

Jeane Wong, a prominent immigration enforcement protester in San Diego, was sentenced last month to 45 days of home detention after pleading guilty to assaulting a federal officer during a law enforcement operation at an apartment complex in Linda Vista in early July. Wong told the judge in asking for a lighter sentence that she had unmasked an agent whom she said had assaulted someone else during the operation.

Protester accused of striking ICE agent during apartment complex operation, charge dismissed

Jul 1, 2026San Diego, CAGuatemala

A Guatemalan man was the target of a federal law enforcement operation in early July at an apartment complex in Linda Vista where agents in face coverings and unmarked vehicles served a warrant. As he backed his car into a parking spot, agents surrounded his vehicle and broke his window. He was accused of striking a government vehicle as he reversed. According to his attorney, his car was surrounded by law enforcement vehicles and the agent had just broken his window. Federal prosecutors dismissed the assault charge, saying they "received additional information that has caused the pursuit of this prosecution to be reevaluated." The incident also resulted in charges against three other individuals present during the operation.

15 people detained during ICE raids in Bloomington-Normal

Jul 1, 2026Bloomington-Normal, IL

Immigration and Customs Enforcement detained 15 people during raids in Bloomington-Normal from July 1-3, 2026, according to the Immigration Project. The detainees had entered the United States legally from Venezuela, Mexico, Ecuador, and Guatemala. Most were apprehended at their workplaces throughout the community. About half were described as long-term residents, while others had recently arrived. Many had been granted humanitarian parole under the Biden administration or had applied for asylum; a few had pending family petitions. One detainee was unaware of a missed immigration court date and was ordered deported in absentia. The raids separated families and caused significant emotional and financial hardship, particularly for families whose primary breadwinner was detained. One detainee was denied a breathing machine while in confinement. The detentions are part of a nationwide ICE enforcement effort that reportedly captured more than 10,000 people during a five-day period.

Pregnant Azerbaijani detainee files federal habeas petition seeking release from ICE custody

Jul 1, 2026FloridaAzerbaijan

Fatima Eminzada, a 24-year-old citizen of Azerbaijan, was detained by ICE on April 4, 2026, and transferred to the South Louisiana ICE Processing Center in Basile, Louisiana. She is pregnant in her first trimester with medical complications including hypothyroidism, possible UTI, and mild anemia. After bond was denied at a redetermination hearing on May 14, 2026, and an immigration judge denied her renewed motion for bond on June 12, 2026, she filed a federal habeas corpus petition on June 25, 2026, represented by attorneys Logan Joseph Duplessis and Giedre Stasiunaite. On July 1, 2026, the court issued a temporary restraining order and ordered ICE respondents to file a medical-status report addressing her current medical conditions, treatment, and access to medical care, with the deadline extended to July 13, 2026.

100+ detained in multi-day ICE enforcement sweep across Gallatin County

Jul 1, 2026Gallatin County, MT

Between July 1-4, 2026, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducted a series of enforcement operations across Gallatin County, detaining an estimated 100+ people through traffic stops, home raids, and workplace sweeps. Local immigrant resource center Bienvenidos documented approximately 25-30 detentions on Monday-Tuesday, followed by more than 80 on Wednesday, with additional arrests continuing through Thursday. Attorneys and community organizations reported that many of the detained individuals had no criminal records and were already participating in the legal immigration process with pending applications and scheduled court appearances. People detained were rapidly transferred between facilities including the Helena Hold Room, Cascade County Detention Center, and facilities in Idaho, Washington, and Nevada, with limited transparency about their locations or conditions.

ICE agent draws gun on mother near school during enforcement operation in Bozeman

Jul 1, 2026Bozeman, MT

On July 1, 2026, Bozeman resident Brandi Straub was driving near Camp Equinox summer theater camp when ICE agents conducting enforcement operations pursued suspects across the street. An ICE agent pointed a gun through Straub's passenger side window as she braked to avoid an enforcement vehicle. Straub's 12-year-old daughter and a neighbor's 11-year-old were attending the camp, located three blocks away with approximately 120 children present. When Straub called 911 to alert authorities to the nearby ICE operation, dispatch informed her that local police could not intervene in ICE operations. The school had not been informed of the enforcement activity taking place in the area.

Bozeman caregiver detained over 24 hours by ICE, fights arrest in federal court

Jul 1, 2026Bozeman, MT

David Cortes-Torres, a 20-year-old man and primary caregiver for his grandmother who is undergoing cancer treatment, was detained by ICE agents in Bozeman on Monday. According to a federal habeas corpus petition filed by Upper Seven Law, agents held him for more than 24 hours at Helena Airport in a small holding room with over 15 other people, pressured him to voluntarily leave the country, and limited his attorney contact to a single three-minute phone call. His lawyers allege the arrest was part of an operation targeting Latinos in the area, and a federal judge ordered him to remain in Montana pending a hearing set for the following Tuesday.

Pakistani detainee held 21 months ordered released by federal court

Jul 1, 2026LAPakistan

A Pakistani national was held in an ICE facility in Louisiana for approximately 21 months without removal. ICE attempted to transfer him to the UAE, which declined, and sought responses from Saudi Arabia, China, Kosovo, and Moldavia without success. A federal court ordered his immediate release, ruling the prolonged detention unconstitutional under Zadvydas v. Davis because removal was not likely in the foreseeable future.

Man held 8 months without bond ordered released after court rejects ICE detention policy

Jul 1, 2026Aurora, CO

Rigoberto Santillan-Quiroz, a long-term U.S. resident married to a legal permanent resident and stepfather to a U.S. citizen, was detained by ICE following a traffic stop in late 2025. He was held for eight months without a bond hearing under a Trump administration policy that categorically denied bond hearings to noncitizens who entered without authorization. The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously ruled the detention policy unlawful, finding it violated due process rights by denying individualized review. The court ordered Santillan-Quiroz's release and reinstatement of bond hearing eligibility, reversing a district court decision and reaffirming that noncitizens have had bond hearing rights for nearly 30 years.

Seven more Prairieland protesters sentenced, six who pled guilty receive 2-15 years

Jul 1, 2026Fort Worth, TX

Seven more defendants were sentenced on July 1, 2026, for their roles in the July 4, 2025 protest at the Prairieland ICE Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas. Six who had pleaded guilty to providing material support to terrorists received sentences ranging from nearly two to 15 years. Ines Soto, who pleaded not guilty but was convicted, was sentenced to 50 years — the same sentence given the previous week to his wife Elizabeth Soto, who was among eight defendants convicted at trial. The six plea-deal defendants received significantly shorter sentences than the eight trial defendants sentenced on June 23, who received 30 to 100 years.

Mother detained by ICE while walking to store, family launches legal defense fundraiser

Jul 1, 2026San Bernardino, CA

A mother was detained by ICE agents on June 29 while walking to a store to buy groceries for her family. Her family has launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for her legal defense, including paying for an ICE custody analyst and legal team to track her intake, pull her records, and analyze her custody status.

Market owner detained by ICE, granted emergency stay against deportation

Jul 1, 2026Friendship, MEIndia

Dhavalkumar Patel, owner of Wallace's Market in Friendship, Maine, was detained by ICE agents on June 28, 2026, at his store. Patel entered the U.S. from India in 2010 and was arrested by Border Patrol on November 1, 2010, for illegal entry. He failed to appear for his immigration hearing and was issued a removal order on August 8, 2011. Following his detention, he was held at Plymouth County Correctional Center in Massachusetts. His attorney filed a habeas corpus motion in U.S. District Court, and a federal judge issued an emergency stay against deportation and a temporary order preventing his transfer for 72 hours, citing due process rights.

Nigerian nun detained by ICE while walking to Mass in Texas, released after congressional intervention

Jul 1, 2026McAllen, TXNigeria

Sister Leticia Ugboaja, a 56-year-old Nigerian-born nun and registered nurse with the Daughters of Mary Mother of Mercy, was arrested by ICE agents on June 28-29, 2026, while walking to Mass in her religious habit at Our Lady of Sorrows Church in McAllen, Texas. Despite being a legal resident with valid immigration status and having worked more than a decade at local Texas hospitals, she was detained and transferred to an ICE detention facility in Raymondville, where she was not allowed to access needed medication. After parish officials and colleague Sister Norma Pimentel contacted local leaders, including U.S. Representatives Monica De La Cruz and Henry Cuellar, Ugboaja was released from ICE custody on June 30. The Catholic Diocese of Brownsville and civil rights organizations called for an investigation into the detention. Ugboaja was distraught upon release, crying and taking time to recover from the arrest. Her detention occurred during a broader ICE enforcement surge in which the agency detained more than 10,000 people in five days.

Guatemalan man arrested at NYC immigration court despite federal judge's order

Jun 30, 2026New York, NYGuatemala

A man from the Dominican Republic was arrested by ICE agents at an immigration court at 290 Broadway in Lower Manhattan on Thursday, June 26, 2026. The man had fled persecution in his home country, entered the U.S., and was released from detention while his immigration case proceeded. He appeared at court as legally required for his scheduled hearing. ICE cited a conviction for trespassing as justification, but advocates with Make the Road New York argue the arrest violates a federal court order issued May 18, 2026, that barred ICE from making arrests at Manhattan immigration courts except in narrow circumstances. The man has since been transferred to ICE's Delaney Hall detention facility in Newark, New Jersey.

Man dragged through shattered vehicle window during ICE operation in Olathe

Jun 30, 2026Olathe, KS

On June 30, an unmarked ICE squad surrounded a work truck in Olathe and shattered the driver's window, dragging the man through the broken glass while morning traffic passed.

Mother of four detained by ICE, newborn and children separated

June 30, 2026North Las Vegas, NV

Laura, a mother of four children including a 2-week-old newborn, is in immigration detention facing deportation proceedings. She has lived in the United States since age 9 and has no criminal record. Her children are being cared for by their grandmother while Laura's case moves through the legal system. The family is seeking financial support for food, childcare, rent, legal expenses, and other necessities while Laura is detained.

ICE Arrests Asylum Applicant in Portland Home, Court Issues Restraining Order

Jun 30, 2026Portland, MaineBurkina Faso

Bernard Kabore, a Burkina Faso citizen who fled violence and religious persecution and was lawfully admitted on a B-2 visa in November 2021, filed an asylum application within one year of arrival and maintained compliance with all USCIS requirements. ICE arrested him at his Portland home on June 30, 2026, and transported him to the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility in Rhode Island. The court issued a temporary restraining order enjoining ICE from removing Kabore from the District of Rhode Island pending resolution of his habeas corpus petition, with exceptions only for medical emergencies or bond hearings before an Immigration Judge.

Asylum Seeker Re-detained at ICE Check-in Despite Prior Release

Jun 30, 2026Pittsburg, CaliforniaMexico

Alberto Jose Mendoza, a 37-year-old Venezuelan national fleeing political persecution, was re-detained on June 20, 2026 when he arrived for a routine check-in at the ICE Los Angeles Field Office. He had been previously released on conditional parole under the Alternatives to Detention program, had complied with all check-in requirements, maintained employment as a payroll manager, and had no criminal history. ICE agents allegedly used excessive force, tackling him during arrest without notice or opportunity to be heard. The court granted his temporary restraining order, ordering his immediate release under the original conditions of supervision and enjoining re-detention without a custody hearing before a neutral arbiter.

Deported Venezuelans trapped in hotel collapse during twin earthquakes, families search for missing

Jun 30, 2026La Guaira, VEVenezuela

On June 24-26, 2026, the US deported approximately 146 Venezuelans, including minors, on a repatriation flight to Venezuela. The deportees were placed in Hotel Santuario (also called Hotel El Santuario) in La Guaira while undergoing repatriation processing. Within hours, twin earthquakes struck Venezuela with magnitude and force sufficient to collapse the hotel. At least 2,200 people were killed and 50,000 reported missing across the country. Among the deportees, some were killed, others severely injured with amputations, and many remain unaccounted for. Families gathered outside the hotel rubble searching for information, hampered by limited rescue access and unclear communication from authorities.

Nicaraguan asylum seeker arrested, fiancee detained, work permit questioned by ICE

Jun 30, 2026Milwaukee, WINicaragua

Galo Suárez, a Nicaraguan asylum seeker, was arrested on S. 13th Street on Milwaukee's South Side when unmarked ICE vehicles boxed in his car. An agent broke his car window with gun drawn. Suárez, his fiancee Reyna Elizabeth Garcia (25), and her brother Teodoro Rafael Garcia (37) were all detained. All three are eligible for work permits as asylum applicants. Suárez alleged that an agent claimed his work permit was forged and that officers used excessive force, pushing his fiancee against the car and verbally abusing her. Suárez was released later that day but his fiancee remains in custody in Kenosha County and the whereabouts of her brother are unknown.

Mexican man deported after traffic stop, illegal re-entry conviction

Jun 30, 2026Chatham County, GAMexico

Luis Angel Velasquez-Montes, 27, was identified during a traffic stop in Chatham County between January and April 2026 and placed in ICE custody. He pleaded guilty to illegal re-entry after previous deportation and was sentenced to time served followed by immediate deportation. Miguel Aparicio-Ortiz, 40, was identified during a traffic stop in Chatham County between January and April 2026 and placed in ICE custody. He pleaded guilty to illegal re-entry after previous deportation and was sentenced to time served followed by immediate deportation.

More than 30 workers detained in HSI raid at Scholar Craft manufacturing plants

Jun 30, 2026Birmingham, AL

On June 30, 2026, Homeland Security Investigations agents executed federal search warrants at Scholar Craft manufacturing plants in Birmingham and Irondale, Alabama, as part of an investigation into alleged identity fraud and unlawful employment practices. More than 30 people identified as being in the country without authorization were encountered and taken into custody pending immigration proceedings. The operation involved federal, state, and local law enforcement partners.

Woman arrested in front of daughter during Wisconsin ICE sweep; 39 detained across state

Jun 30, 2026WisconsinMexico

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducted a large-scale enforcement operation across Wisconsin over the final weekend of June 2026, resulting in 39 arrests in one of the state's largest operations in recent years. The operation was notable for its public, daylight nature and included arrests in Milwaukee and surrounding areas. ICE agents arrested a Dominican woman in front of her 7-year-old daughter, Mexican twins in their driveway, and a Salvadoran man outside a courthouse following a traffic court appearance. ICE stated those arrested had criminal histories including sexual assault, DUIs, domestic abuse, and drug possession. However, an attorney representing arrestees stated none had prior convictions in Wisconsin or outstanding removal orders, and some detainees were asylum seekers with valid work permits. Immigrant advocates documented that ICE agents used city and county property as staging areas without permission, wore face masks in violation of a local ordinance, and used excessive force. Detainees were held in Wisconsin, Illinois, and as far as Florida.

Longtime U.S. resident Rigoberto Santillan-Quiroz ordered released after eight months in ICE detention without bond

Jun 30, 2026

The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that ICE's policy of mandatory detention without bond for noncitizens violates due process and federal law, ordering the release of Rigoberto Santillan-Quiroz. Santillan-Quiroz, who has lived in the U.S. for approximately twenty years and is married to a legal permanent resident with a U.S. citizen stepdaughter, was arrested during an interior traffic stop in November 2025 and held for eight months without a bond hearing under the Trump administration's July 2025 detention policy. The court found no justification for his detention, noting he posed no flight risk or danger to public safety and had never been charged with a crime. The court ordered the government to grant him a bond hearing within seven days or release him, and the ruling applies across the Tenth Circuit's six-state jurisdiction.

Multiple residents detained during ICE operations across Kansas City, Missouri

Jun 29, 2026Kansas City, MO

On June 29, four ICE vehicles conducted operations across Kansas City, Missouri. Agents moved down Truman Road and Indiana in the Northeast, then to an apartment complex at 23rd and Topping, where they demanded identification and dragged residents from their own doorways.

Father detained by ICE after traffic arrest, family seeks legal aid

Jun 29, 2026Covington, GA

Tania Hernandez's father was arrested on June 29, 2026, for driving without a license. After the family paid his bond and he was scheduled for release, ICE placed a hold on him at the detention facility, preventing his release. The family is now seeking legal representation to address the immigration enforcement action.

18-year-old from El Salvador detained by ICE after seven years in U.S.

Jun 29, 2026McFarland, CAEl Salvador

Roberto Antonio Avila Perla, an 18-year-old from El Salvador, was detained by ICE on June 29, 2026, and transferred to Golden State Annex Detention Facility in McFarland, California. Avila Perla entered the United States in May 2019 and was released on his own recognizance. He obtained Special Immigrant Juvenile status in September 2023 and had his removal proceedings administratively closed in October 2023, with no criminal history and no final removal order. The court granted his habeas corpus petition, finding his detention violated the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause, and ordered his immediate release with restrictions on future detention requiring advance notice and bond hearings.

Russian trafficking survivor detained at ICE check-in, facing deportation to Russia during war

Jun 29, 2026Oklahoma City, OKRussia

Milana, a Russian immigrant and trafficking survivor, was detained at ICE's Oklahoma City office during a routine immigration check-in in September 2025. She arrived in the U.S. on a fiancé visa in the early 2000s, escaped an abusive first marriage involving human trafficking, and received a removal order in 2003 that was later converted to an order of supervision requiring routine check-ins. For over 20 years, she complied with these check-ins while building a life in the U.S., raising her U.S. citizen daughter, working consistently, and marrying Roger Swope, a U.S. Army veteran. On the day of her detention, ICE suddenly acted on the dormant removal order. Her attorney, Elissa Stiles, filed multiple legal challenges including habeas corpus petitions and argued Milana qualifies for a trafficking victim visa, but all were denied. A federal judge ruled on June 29, 2026, that Milana had not cooperated with Russian consulate authorities. ICE initially attempted to deport her to Russia despite the active war and closed airspace, then considered third-country removal options. Roger has spent over $20,000 on legal efforts. Since detention, Milana has been moved multiple times between facilities in Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Texas, shackled during transfers. Her attorney states the only remaining option is to appeal to ICE for humanitarian intervention, as Milana fears for her life if deported to Russia during the ongoing war.

ICE operations detain roughly 150 in Gallatin County, terrorize Latino community

Jun 29, 2026Bozeman, MT

ICE conducted multiple operations throughout the week of June 29 around Bozeman and Gallatin Gateway, detaining approximately 150 residents according to nonprofit Bienvenidos a Gallatin Valley, though other estimates put the number around 100. Following the arrests, fear gripped the local Latino community; many residents stopped leaving their homes entirely out of fear of arrest, and Latino business employees with valid visas ceased working. In response, Bienvenidos a Gallatin Valley organized emergency deliveries of groceries, toiletries, diapers, infant formula, and other household supplies to nearly 160 households across Gallatin County between June 26 and July 7.

Asylum seeker with ankle monitor detained with 8-year-old son from Wisconsin home

Jun 29, 2026Wisconsin Dells, WI

Diana Socha Torres and her 8-year-old son were taken from their home in Wisconsin Dells in late June during the ICE surge. Socha Torres had an active asylum case, was wearing an ICE-issued ankle monitor, and had no criminal charges or convictions in Wisconsin. She and her son were transported to an ICE office in downtown Milwaukee and then transferred to the South Texas Residential Detention Center in Dilley, Texas. The arrest separated the child from their home and disrupted an active legal case.

Couple violently arrested by ICE from food market in Milwaukee

Jun 29, 2026Milwaukee, WI

Galo Suárez, 25, and his fiancée Reyna Elizabeth Garcia were arrested by ICE agents during the three-day surge. Suárez, who has a valid work permit, and Garcia were followed from a food market and arrested by masked agents in unmarked vehicles who broke out their windows, refused to answer questions, and repeatedly called them "dogs" in Spanish. Suárez was released and told to "run and not look back" or else he'd regret it; the agents retained Garcia and her brother. Suárez later joined concerned residents and local activists marching through Milwaukee's South Side to call for his fiancée's release.

20-year-old detained by ICE after traffic stop, law firm challenges arrest in federal court

Jun 29, 2026Bozeman, MT

Jose David Cortes Torres, a 20-year-old noncitizen who has lived in Bozeman since 2023, was pulled over on June 29 while driving to work by ICE agents in an unmarked white Dodge Durango. According to court documents, agents asked for his driver's license, told him he had no right to be in the United States, and arrested him without charging him with a crime. He was detained for more than 24 hours in a holding room at the Helena airport with more than 15 other individuals, forced to stand for approximately six hours due to cramped conditions, and was limited to a single three-minute phone call with attorneys. He was told to voluntarily self-deport or face months of lockup. His lawyers at Upper Seven Law filed a habeas corpus petition in federal court alleging the arrest violated constitutional due process rights and was part of a dragnet operation targeting Latinos based on race and language, without individualized suspicion. Cortes Torres is the primary caretaker for his grandmother, who is undergoing cancer treatment.

Woman detained by ICE challenges mandatory detention without bond hearing

Jun 29, 2026Willacy County, Texas

Jeny Patricia Mazariegos Garcia is currently detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the El Valle Detention Center in Willacy County, Texas. She filed a habeas petition challenging the government's ability to detain her without a bond hearing under 8 U.S.C. § 1225(b)(2)(A), alleging that mandatory detention violates her Fifth Amendment due process rights. The district court denied her request for preliminary injunction and decided to await a Fifth Circuit decision in a similar case before ruling on the constitutional claims.

Latin American asylum seeker deported to DR Congo faces psychological strain and poor conditions

Jun 29, 2026

Marta, a Latin American asylum seeker deported to the Democratic Republic of Congo under a U.S. third-country deportation policy, described feeling emotionally adrift and psychologically strained by her uncertain situation. Living in conditions marked by frequent power cuts, lack of clean water, and constant illness, she expressed distress about not knowing what her future holds.

Store owner Dale Patel arrested by ICE, court blocks deportation

Jun 29, 2026Friendship, MEIndia

Dale Patel (also known as Dhavalkumar Kalidas Patel), owner of Wallace's Market in Friendship, Maine, was arrested by ICE agents on June 27 at his workplace. A native of India, Patel allegedly entered the U.S. without authorization on November 1, 2010, and failed to appear for an immigration hearing, resulting in a removal order issued in August 2011. He is being held at Plymouth County Correctional Facility in Massachusetts while his wife Hanna manages the store and cares for their 2.5-year-old U.S.-born son. Attorney Audrey Richardson filed a habeas corpus petition challenging his detention. U.S. District Court Judge Indira Talwani issued an emergency order preventing Patel's transfer for at least 72 hours and ordering advance notice before any transfer out of Massachusetts. Over 200 community members signed a petition supporting his return, and a GoFundMe campaign raised more than $7,800 to assist the family.

Pregnant mothers, working families challenge ICE's mass GPS monitoring policy

Jun 29, 2026Washington, DC

The Amica Center for Immigrant Rights, Robert & Ethel Kennedy Human Rights Center, and Zuckerman Spaeder LLP filed a federal class action lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia challenging ICE's GPS monitoring rule imposed in June 2025, which affects nearly 50,000 immigrants. Plaintiffs—mostly working mothers including pregnant, postpartum, and nursing women—report physical harm from ankle and wrist monitors including pain, swelling, bleeding, and sleep disruption, as well as psychological distress, job loss, and inability to access medical care or meet caregiving responsibilities. ICE imposed the policy uniformly without individualized justifications, even for people the agency determined pose neither flight risk nor danger. The lawsuit argues the policy transforms an alternatives-to-detention program into an arbitrary surveillance system that extends ICE's control into homes and workplaces without increasing court appearance rates.

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