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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsICE swarmed Central Coast neighborhoods after Christmas. Here's when and where
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents reportedly swarmed the Central Coast over the weekend, with a local advocacy group saying agents plucked people from their neighborhoods, workplaces and shopping centers without warning.
Immigration agents took at least 92 people into custody from Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties on Saturday, Sunday and Monday, according to data collected by 805 UndocuFund, a local nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting undocumented immigrants and their families. The elevated ICE activity appeared to continue later into the week as well.
This one is a direct attack on our communities, 805 UndocuFund communications and media organizer Claudia Gonzalez said, noting that ICE picked most people up in areas where immigrants live and work.
805 UndocuFund collected this data from rapid responders who witness the arrests and community members who call and report the arrests of their friends and family members, she said. The group then checks the numbers to ensure there arent duplicates of the same incident in the dataset.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/ice-swarmed-central-coast-neighborhoods-192420254.html
Igel
(37,334 posts)a deep blue city where the reporting org is lefter than many--riled people in many respects.
But they were faithful to the facts.
They're based in Austin, TX. And only addressed ICE-arrested/detained people in TX.
Early-ish in 2025 most of those detained had either criminal records or criminal charges filed against them. And local LE agencies reported them. TX cooperates with ICE. The reporters had no way of distinguishing between the two groups--those with convictions or just charges. But under the new law, the difference is largely effaced as far as ICE is concerned.
Later, a significant %age was still convicted/charged, but not a majority. This, too, is reasonable. The pool of those convicted and charged is finite, recidivism is a thing. Shrink the pool, shrink those 'caught.' Even as ICE said the "focus" was on those with criminal convictions or charges, which many apparently interpreted as not "focused" but "exclusively apprehending." I mean, I can focus on one thing but still have other things to deal with, so it's not a stark all/nothing binary. (Don't we break binaries?)
Now, TX has provided ICE with a large number of potential or actual deportees. As it "should", statistically speaking--it's not a small state in terms of acreage or head count. And more than its share of unauthorized immigrants settle here, so there's that.
Please, somebody, point me to the kind of ICE sweep like this, or in Chicago, or other blue states, that's occurred in TX. Threats of National Guard? Threats to withhold some federal funding because of immigrancy-related obdurance? (Which, apparently, the OED accepts but DU's spellcheck rejects. Derived from "obdurate".) I look forward to the PMs but honestly don't expect any that are on point.
This makes sense. If you have a large(ish) percentage of those who entered the US by less than legal means, as defined by current regs, there are two ways to deal with removing them (after whatever immigration law says is due process). One is (A) having local LE report them when encountered; the other is (B) "sweeps". And, you know, in the last 10 months it's not been A union B, but A or B. (Don't feel like finding/cutting/pasting the set-theoretic symbols here ... faster to give a mea culpa like this).
dalton99a
(91,943 posts)ICE is removing more people from Austins jails. Sometimes coming twice a day.
The Texas Newsroom | By Mose Buchele
Published October 27, 2025 at 7:52 AM CDT
ICE agents are seizing more people from jails in the Austin area, county officials tell The Texas Newsroom, sometimes visiting the facilities multiple times per day as the Trump administration ramps up immigration enforcement nationwide.
For inmates in our care and custody, they usually wait 24 hours or less because we get pickups from [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement] almost every day, Kristen Dark, public information officer of the Travis County Sheriffs Office, said in an interview this month.
She added: Sometimes they do pick up from us twice a day.
Aggressive immigration sweeps and arrests have become a hallmark of Trump-era immigration policy. Cities in blue states like California and Illinois have seen the most public crackdowns, including the deployment of federal troops. But, in Texas, where local leaders are compelled to hand people arrested on other charges over to ICE directly from county jails, many immigration arrests remain hidden from public view.
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