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FBI confirms it assisted Avon police and ICE with traffic stop arrests on July 22

FBI confirms it assisted Avon police and ICE with traffic stop arrests on July 22

The Federal Bureau of Investigation confirmed that it provided federal warrants to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and the Avon Police Department, who were conducting arrests of undocumented migrants on July 22.
Fox59 first broke the news on July 23 that ICE and Avon police were working together to conduct a "traffic blitz" in Avon, Indiana, approximately three miles from the Marion County border.
The "traffic blitz" resulted in the arrests of approximately 20 people after police conducted traffic stops based on traffic violations, registration violations and aggressive driving, according to Fox59.
When Avon officers encountered individuals who were "undocumented and/or unlicensed foreign nationals," officers contacted ICE agents to investigate the person, according to a statement Avon Police Chief Sean Stoops provided to Fox59.
It's unclear where the people arrested currently are. They did not appear in the Hendricks County jail roster on July 23 or July 24.
In an email to the IndyStar, an FBI spokesperson confirmed that the agency had been assisting ICE with operations for several months, and that it provided federal agents with federal warrants "as needed." The spokesperson added that FBI agents did not physically assist in July 22 arrests.
IndyStar reached out to the Avon Police Department for comment but did not receive an answer by the time of publication.
Neither the Avon Police Department nor the Hendricks County Sheriff's office have sent in a formal application to participate in ICE's 287(g) program, which allows ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations to partner with state and local law enforcement agencies to identify and remove criminal migrants who agree to leave the U.S.
In late May, Stephen Miller, a deputy White House chief of staff and architect of Trump's immigration agenda, set a quota for at least 3,000 arrests per day and told ICE leadership to target anyone without legal status.
This call to action has led to a significant spike in migrants detained by ICE, according to data collected by the Deportation Data Project, which is a dataset built by journalists, researchers, lawyers, and policymakers using the Freedom of Information Act.
The database showcases that in June 2025 the number of non-criminal arrests had surpassed the number of people being arrested with either a criminal conviction or pending charges.
Axios Indianapolis recently reported that in June, "23% of the 309 people ICE arrested in the state had no criminal charge," according to Axios.
Indiana Governor Mike Braun told Axios that, "If that data is correct, I'd say that should raise eyebrows."
"Because I've been clearly on record: the worst first. And there are many of them out there," he said.
In June 2025, IndyStar reported on several ICE detainments that had either been captured on file or shared by community leaders. These detainments were a notable contrast to how federal agents had conducted arrests in prior months.
Witnesses told IndyStar that some of those arrests started off as traffic stops before the person found themselves detained by federal agents.
In July 2025, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement posted on social media that its Indianapolis team had made more than 30 arrests in a 24-hour period, saying that this number was due to the "cooperative agencies across Indiana, including 287(g) partners."
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Trump boasts of deporting the ‘worst of the worst.' LA raids tell a far different story
Trump boasts of deporting the ‘worst of the worst.' LA raids tell a far different story

Miami Herald

time39 minutes ago

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Trump boasts of deporting the ‘worst of the worst.' LA raids tell a far different story

LOS ANGELES - They called them the 'worst of the worst.' For more than a month and a half, the Trump administration has posted a barrage of mugshots of L.A. undocumented immigrants with long rap sheets. Officials have spotlighted Cuong Chanh Phan, a 49-year-old Vietnamese man convicted in 1997 of second-degree murder for his role in slaying two teens at a high school graduation party. They have shared blurry photos on Instagram of a slew of convicted criminals such as Rolando Veneracion-Enriquez, a 55-year-old Filipino man convicted in 1996 of sexual penetration with a foreign object with force and assault with intent to commit a felony. And Eswin Uriel Castro, a Mexican convicted in 2002 of child molestation and in 2021 of assault with a deadly weapon. But the immigrants that the Department of Homeland Security showcase in X posts and news releases do not represent the majority of immigrants swept up across Los Angeles. As the number of immigration arrests in the L.A. region quadrupled from 540 in April to 2,185 in June, seven out of 10 immigrants arrested in June had no criminal conviction - a trend that immigrant advocates say belies administration claims that they are targeting 'heinous illegal alien criminals' who represent a threat to public safety. According to a Los Angeles Times analysis of ICE data from the Deportation Data Project, the proportion of immigrants without criminal convictions arrested in seven counties in and around L.A. has skyrocketed from 35% in April, to 46% in May, and to 69% from June 1 to June 26. Austin Kocher, a geographer and research assistant professor at Syracuse University who specializes in immigration enforcement, said the Trump administration was not being entirely honest about the criminal status of those they were arresting. 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In Los Angeles, the raids swept up garment worker Jose Ortiz, who worked 18 years at the Ambiance Apparel clothing warehouse in downtown L.A., before being nabbed in a June 6 raid; car wash worker Jesus Cruz, a 52-year-old father who was snatched on June 8 - just before his daughter's graduation - from Westchester Hand Wash; and Emma De Paz, a recent widow and tamale vendor from Guatemala who was arrested June 19 outside a Hollywood Home Depot. Such arrests may be influencing the public's perception of the raids. Multiple polls show support for Trump's immigration agenda slipping as masked federal agents increasingly swoop up undocumented immigrants from workplaces and streets. 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As White House chief adviser on border policy Tom Homan put it: 'If you're in the country illegally, you got a problem.' Still, things did not really pick up until May, when White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller ordered ICE's top field officials to shift to more aggressive tactics: arresting undocumented immigrants, whether or not they had a criminal record. Miller set a new goal: arresting 3,000 undocumented people a day, a quota that immigration experts say is impossible to reach by focusing only on criminals. 'There aren't enough criminal immigrants in the United States to fill their arrest quotas and to get millions and millions of deportations, which is what the president has explicitly promised,' Bier said. 'Immigration and Customs Enforcement says there's half a million removable noncitizens who have criminal convictions in the United States. Most of those are nonviolent: traffic, immigration offenses. It's not millions and millions.' By the time Trump celebrated six months in office, DHS boasted that the Trump administration had already arrested more than 300,000 undocumented immigrants. '70% of ICE arrests,' the agency said in a news release, 'are individuals with criminal convictions or charges.' But that claim no longer appeared to be true. While 78% of undocumented immigrants arrested across the U.S. in April had a criminal conviction or faced a pending charge, that number had plummeted to 57% in June. In L.A., the difference between what Trump officials said and the reality on the ground was more stark: Only 43% of those arrested across the L.A. region had criminal convictions or faced a pending charge. Still, ICE kept insisting it was 'putting the worst first.' As stories circulate across communities about the arrests of law-abiding immigrants, there are signs that support for Trump's deportation agenda is falling. 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It has threatened to withhold federal funds to California due to its 'sanctuary state' law, which limits county jails from coordinating with ICE except in cases involving immigrants convicted of a serious crime or felonies such as murder, rape, robbery or arson. Last week, the U.S. Justice Department requested California counties, including L.A., provide data on all jail inmates who are not U.S. citizens in an effort to help federal immigration agents prioritize those who have committed crimes. 'Although every illegal alien by definition violates federal law,' the U.S. Justice Department said in a news release, 'those who go on to commit crimes after doing so show that they pose a heightened risk to our Nation's safety and security.' As Americans are bombarded with dueling narratives of good vs. bad immigrants, Kocher believes the question we have to grapple with is not 'What does the data say?' 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In the rush to blast out mugshots of some of the most criminal L.A. immigrants, the Trump administration left out a key part of the story. According to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, its staff notified ICE on May 5 of Veneracion's pending release after he had served nearly 30 years in prison for the crimes of assault with intent to commit rape and sexual penetration with a foreign object with force. But ICE failed to pick up Veneracion and canceled its hold on him May 19, a day before he was released on parole. A few weeks later, as ICE amped up its raids, federal agents arrested Veneracion on June 7 at the ICE office in L.A. The very next day, DHS shared his mugshot in a news release titled 'President Trump is Stepping Up Where Democrats Won't.' The same document celebrated the capture of Phan, who served nearly 25 years in prison after he was convicted of second-degree murder. CDCR said the Board of Parole Hearings coordinated with ICE after Phan was granted parole in 2022. Phan was released that year to ICE custody. But those details did not stop Trump officials from taking credit for his arrest and blaming California leaders for letting Phan loose. 'It is sickening that Governor Newsom and Mayor Bass continue to protect violent criminal illegal aliens at the expense of the safety of American citizens and communities,' DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

ICE arrests Maryland pastor for overstaying visa, holds him in Louisiana
ICE arrests Maryland pastor for overstaying visa, holds him in Louisiana

Miami Herald

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ICE arrests Maryland pastor for overstaying visa, holds him in Louisiana

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How Democrats Can Win on Immigration
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Wall Street Journal

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