
Trump immigration enforcement hampered by detention capacity, Florida sheriff warns
A Florida sheriff said law enforcement is 'waiting at go' to assist the Trump administration with immigration enforcement, but worries about the lack of detention capacity.
Fox News Digital spoke with Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd on the current status of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown.
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'We heard President Trump loud and clear when he said start with the worst first, and let's get these illegal aliens out of the country,' Judd said.
However, the sheriff pointed to a significant bottleneck: the lack of federal capacity to detain migrants, and that, despite arrests, 'they're turned [migrants] back into the street' due to ICE's limited resources.
Judd pointed to the lack of holding facilities and the complications arising from federal rules, which generally prevent local jails from holding migrants for more than 48 hours after their release from local custody unless the jails have Intergovernmental Service Agreements (IGSAs) that allow for longer detention under federal authority.
3 Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd pointed to a lack of federal capacity to detain migrants for haults in the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
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'You see, county jails can hold them [migrants] short term if we have accompanying criminal charges, but we can't hold them long term,' he said. 'We're more than willing to do that with the federal government once the federal government recognizes that we're helping them — they're not helping us.'
The need for additional detention space and resources came as the Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) became the first in the nation to train and deploy troopers under the federal 287(g) agreement, which authorizes designated state officers to enforce immigration law in partnership with federal agents.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says the initiative is already delivering results and believes it could serve as a blueprint for other states seeking to take immigration enforcement into their own hands.
3 'We heard President Trump loud and clear when he said start with the worst first, and let's get these illegal aliens out of the country,' Judd said.
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Judd called for federal executive action, saying, 'The president is the only one that can break this logjam.'
The Sunshine State, he said, is prepared to execute practical solutions, such as setting up temporary 'soft side housing' for detainees, modeled after hurricane emergency shelters.
'We're eager to make it happen. We're sitting on go,' he said, while criticizing the lack of support. 'The federal government doesn't have the infrastructure to hold them, nor are they willing to pay when we offer the infrastructure.'
3 People place white carnation flowers on the fence of the Krome Detention Center during a vigil protesting US Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody and mass deportations in Miami.
AFP via Getty Images
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Judd defended ICE personnel, acknowledging their efforts despite what he describes as inherited limitations from the previous Biden administration.
'But they are limited,' he said. 'They're severely limited because they're operating with the resources that the Biden administration left them with. And the Biden administration wasn't into deporting people. They were into importing people.'
The sheriff said stricter detention policies will serve as a deterrent for migrants.
'We've got to stop the game playing, and only the federal government can do it,' he said.
Fox News Digital has reached out to ICE for comment.

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New York Post
25 minutes ago
- New York Post
Russia sets out punitive terms at peace talks with Ukraine
Russia told Ukraine at peace talks on Monday that it would only agree to end the war if Kyiv gives up big new chunks of territory and accepts limits on the size of its army, according to a memorandum reported by Russian media. The terms, formally presented at negotiations in Istanbul, highlighted Moscow's refusal to compromise on its longstanding war goals despite calls by US President Donald Trump to end the 'bloodbath' in Ukraine. Ukraine has repeatedly rejected the Russian conditions as tantamount to surrender. 6 The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, members of Ukrainian and Russian delegations, attend peace talks presided over by Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan (center) on June 2, 2025, at Ciragan Palace in Istanbul, Turkey. Getty Images Delegations from the warring sides met for barely an hour, for only the second such round of negotiations since March 2022. They agreed to exchange more prisoners of war – focusing on the youngest and most severely wounded – and return the bodies of 12,000 dead soldiers. Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan described it as a great meeting and said he hoped to bring together Russia's Vladimir Putin and Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky for a meeting in Turkey with Trump. But there was no breakthrough on a proposed ceasefire that Ukraine, its European allies and Washington have all urged Russia to accept. Moscow says it seeks a long-term settlement, not a pause in the war; Kyiv says Putin is not interested in peace. Trump has said the United States is ready to walk away from its mediation efforts unless the two sides demonstrate progress towards a deal. Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov, who headed Kyiv's delegation, said Kyiv – which has drawn up its own peace roadmap – would review the Russian document, on which he offered no immediate comment. 6 Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with Presidential Commissioner for Children's Rights Maria Lvova-Belova in Moscow, Russia, on June 2, 2025. via REUTERS Ukraine has proposed holding more talks before the end of June, but believes only a meeting between Zelensky and Putin can resolve the many issues of contention, Umerov said. Zelensky said Ukraine presented a list of 400 children it says have been abducted to Russia, but that the Russian delegation agreed to work on returning only 10 of them. Russia says the children were moved from war zones to protect them. RUSSIAN DEMANDS The Russian memorandum, which was published by the Interfax news agency, said a settlement of the war would require international recognition of Crimea – a peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014 – and four other regions of Ukraine that Moscow has claimed as its own territory. Ukraine would have to withdraw its forces from all of them. 6 Tupolev Tu-22 aircraft with objects on their wings at Olenya Airbase in the Murmansk region, Russia on May 23, 2025. Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies/AFP via Getty Images It restated Moscow's demands that Ukraine become a neutral country – ruling out membership of NATO – and that it protect the rights of Russian speakers, make Russian an official language and enact a legal ban on glorification of Nazism. Ukraine rejects the Nazi charge as absurd and denies discriminating against Russian speakers. 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Russian delegation head Vladimir Medinsky said Moscow had also suggested a 'specific ceasefire of two to three days in certain sections of the front' so that the bodies of dead soldiers could be collected. According to a proposed roadmap drawn up by Ukraine, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, Kyiv wants no restrictions on its military strength after any peace deal, no international recognition of Russian sovereignty over parts of Ukraine taken by Moscow's forces, and reparations. UKRAINE TARGETS RUSSIAN BOMBER FLEET The conflict has been heating up, with Russia launching its biggest drone attacks of the war and advancing on the battlefield in May at its fastest rate in six months. 6 A serviceman from the mobile air defence unit of the 115th Separate Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces fires a Browning machine gun towards a Russian drone during an overnight shift, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv Region, Ukraine, on June 2, 2025. REUTERS On Sunday, Ukraine said it launched 117 drones in an operation codenamed 'Spider's Web' to attack Russian nuclear-capable long-range bomber planes at airfields in Siberia and the far north of the country. Satellite imagery suggested the attacks had caused substantial damage, although the two sides gave conflicting accounts of the extent of it. Western military analysts described the strikes, thousands of miles from the front lines, as one of the most audacious Ukrainian operations of the war. Russia's strategic bomber fleet forms part of the 'triad' of forces – along with missiles launched from the ground or from submarines – that make up the country's nuclear arsenal, the biggest in the world. Faced with repeated warnings from Putin of Russia's nuclear might, the US and its allies have been wary throughout the Ukraine conflict of the risk that it could spiral into World War Three. 6 Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference on the day of the NATO Bucharest Nine (B9) meeting in Vilnius, Lithuania, on June 2, 2025. REUTERS A current US administration official said Trump and the White House were not notified before the attack. A former administration official said Ukraine, for operational security reasons, regularly does not disclose to Washington its plans for such actions. A UK government official said the British government also was not told ahead of time. Zelensky said the operation, which involved drones concealed inside wooden sheds, had helped to restore partners' confidence that Ukraine is able to continue waging the war. 'Ukraine says that we are not going to surrender and are not going to give in to any ultimatums,' he told an online news briefing. 'But we do not want to fight, we do not want to demonstrate our strength – we demonstrate it because the enemy does not want to stop.'


Washington Post
32 minutes ago
- Washington Post
New presidential portrait revealed by White House depicts somber Trump
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Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Lead detective's text messages cast shadow over Karen Read murder trial
Special prosecutor Hank Brennan may have dulled the impact of inappropriate text messages the lead homicide detective sent regarding Karen Read days before she was charged with the murder of John O'Keefe – but they're still damaging to the state's case and not just because he used vulgar and obscene language, experts say. The texts were a bomb that blew up the first trial when they were read with Michael Proctor on the witness stand, and it ended with a deadlocked jury last year. This time around, prosecutors decided not to call him as a witness, and it was his childhood friend Jonathan Diamandis who – visibly uncomfortable – walked the jury through the conversation. But beyond the crass remarks about Read, experts say less explosive messages about Proctor's early opinions of the investigation could be damning. "Proctor is mentally begging [the defense] to call him," retired Massachusetts Superior Court Judge and Boston College law professor Jack Lu told Fox News Digital. "Now that the texts are in, they will not call Proctor unless they are convinced they have lost – the old 'Hail Mary' pass." Karen Read Update: Fired Lead Investigator On Witness List For 2Nd Trial In Boston Cop John O'keefe's Death Lu said the defense team gained some ground with Diamandis on the stand, but with Brennan facing the text chain head-on, the messages were likely not a significant shift in Read's favor. Read On The Fox News App "Will the jury be truly shocked by abusive texts from a police officer investigating a person they think is a murderer?" Lu said. "I doubt it." Read is accused of hitting her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe, with her Lexus SUV during a drunken argument before leaving him to freeze to death in the front yard of a friend's home in the early morning hours of Jan. 29, 2022. Diamandis testified he has been in a group chat with Proctor for more than a decade and was privy to text messages sent during the investigation into O'Keefe's death. Karen Read Case: Massachusetts Trooper Michael Proctor 'Terminated' From State Police The Massachusetts State Police fired Proctor in March after an internal investigation found he had shared sensitive and confidential information about the case with people outside of law enforcement. Read's first trial revealed inappropriate text messages the lead investigator sent as the case was unfolding. "The messages prove one thing, and that Michael is human – not corrupt, not incompetent in his role as a homicide detective and certainly not unfit to continue to be a Massachusetts State Trooper," his sister, Courtney Proctor, previously said in a statement. On cross-examination, Brennan asked Diamandis to read to the jury Proctor's messages from the day O'Keefe's body was discovered. "She waffled him," Proctor wrote, referring to Read. "I looked at his body in the hospital." Proctor weighed in with his own observations of what may have happened to O'Keefe, initially agreeing with another member of the group chat that the Boston police officer may have been beaten to death. "That's what I initially thought after talking to [a] Canton paramedic," Proctor wrote. "Then I saw the guy." Karen Read Trial: Lead Detective's Wife Slams Suspected Cop Killer's Media Tour As 'Unrelenting Propaganda' Asked for more details, Proctor replied with a message implicating Read, telling his friends, "she hit him with her car." "Gotcha," one pal wrote. "[O'Keefe] was frozen in the driveway, and she didn't see him." "That's another animal we won't be able to prove," Proctor replied. "They arrived at the house together, got into an argument, she was driving and left." Defense Lawyers Urged To Reexamine Convictions Led By Fired Karen Read Detective The text messages raise the possibility that Proctor reached a conclusion on O'Keefe's death before the investigation finished, according to Massachusetts defense attorney Grace Edwards. He sent them around 11 p.m. on Jan. 29, 2022 – the day O'keefe had been found. An autopsy wasn't completed until two days later. "These text messages were from the night of John O'Keefe's death, and it appears that Michael Proctor has already come to a conclusion about the case – before the medical examiner's report," Edwards told Fox News Digital. "His conclusion was premature." Proctor's alleged rush to implicate Read could have caused him to ignore evidence pointing to other possibilities surrounding the cause of O'Keefe's death, according to Edwards. "Michael Proctor is not qualified to make a determination about how John O'Keefe died," Edwards said. "That is what we have medical examiners for. Based on the text messages, Michael Proctor had come to that conclusion all on his own within hours of O'Keefe's death." Karen Read Judge Blocks Sandra Birchmore Mentions; Expert Says Cases Should Be Wake-up Call For Police Criminal defense attorney Mark Bederow also pointed to Proctor's professional inability to determine what – or who – killed O'Keefe, and how the immediate assumption could have been detrimental to the investigation. "[Proctor] is not qualified to say that," Bederow told Fox News Digital. "There is an abundance of evidence of Proctor's investigative tunnel vision and bias." As the tone of the texts shifted, Diamandis told the courtroom he did not want to continue reading the messages aloud because they contained "uncomfortable words," prompting Brennan to read them and ask Diamandis to confirm that what he was reading was an accurate depiction of the texts on the chain. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub "Yeah, she's a babe," Proctor wrote. "Weird Fall River accent though. No a--." The text chain turned obscene at points, including mocking Read over a purported medical issue. Proctor is subject to witness sequestration and declined to comment. Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X Proctor is on the defense witness list, but Read's team called Diamandis instead, in what Edwards believes is a risky move by the defense. "Brennan has now taken the wind out of the sails of the defense because the reading of those texts did not have the impact that they did during the first trial when Michael Proctor read them himself," Edwards said. The choice to call Proctor's childhood friend could be viewed as a safe way for the defense team to drop the bombshell text chain without risking cross-examination by the state. On the other hand, the defense can now point to the fact that prosecutors declined to put their lead investigator on the witness stand, Bederow said. "They'll likely pursue a 'missing witness' instruction from the court in which the judge will inform jurors they may draw an adverse inference against prosecution for their failure to call Proctor," he said. "It is virtually unheard of for the prosecution not to call the lead investigator in a murder case, but of course it's also extraordinarily rare that the lead investigator was terminated for unprofessional behavior and bias on [the same] case."Original article source: Lead detective's text messages cast shadow over Karen Read murder trial