
Kristi Noem walks out to song ‘Hot Mama' at first official DHS news conference
Kristi Noem walked out to her first official news conference as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security soundtracked to the country song 'Hot Mama.' Following a prayer, Noem walked to the podium to rapturous applause while the Trace Adkins hit played.
Noem addressed the DHS employees on Tuesday (28 January) afternoon, having participated in US Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids earlier in the day. In a post to X, Noem, dressed as an ICE agent, told camera, 'we are getting the dirt bags off these streets.'
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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
US sees spate of arrests of civilians impersonating Ice officers
Police in southern California arrested a man suspected of posing as a federal immigration officer this week, the latest in a series of such arrests, as masked, plainclothes immigration agents are deployed nationwide to meet the Trump administration's mass deportation targets. The man, Fernando Diaz, was arrested by Huntington Park police after officers said they found a loaded gun and official-looking documents with Department of Homeland Security headings in his SUV, according to NBC Los Angeles. Officers were impounding his vehicle for parking in a handicapped zone when Diaz asked to retrieve items inside, the police said. Among the items seen by officers in the car were 'multiple copies of passports not registered under the individual's name', NBC reports. Diaz was arrested for possession of the allegedly unregistered firearm and released on bail. The Huntington Park police chief and mayor accused Diaz of impersonating an immigration agent at a news conference, a move Diaz later told the NBC News affiliate he was surprised by. Diaz also denied to the outlet that he had posed as an officer with border patrol or Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice). At the news conference, police showed reporters paper they found inside his car with an official-looking US Customs and Border Protection header. The arrest is one of several cases involving people allegedly impersonating immigration officials, as the nationwide crackdown on undocumented immigrants intensifies. Experts have warned that federal agents' increased practice of masking while carrying out immigration raids and arrests makes it easier for imposters to pose as federal officers. Around the country, the sight of Ice officers emerging from unmarked cars in plainclothes to make arrests has become increasingly common. In March, for instance, a Tufts University student was seen on video being arrested by masked Ice officials outside her apartment, after her visa had been revoked for writing an opinion article in her university newspaper advocating for Palestinian rights. And many federal agents operating in the Los Angeles region in recent weeks have been masked. In late January, a week after Trump took office, a man in South Carolina was arrested and charged with kidnapping and impersonating an officer, after allegedly presenting himself as an Ice officer and detaining a group of Latino men. In February, two people impersonating Ice officers attempted to enter a Temple University residence hall. CNN reported that Philadelphia police later arrested one of them, a 22-year-old student, who was charged with impersonating an officer. In North Carolina the same week, another man, Carl Thomas Bennett, was arrested after allegedly impersonating an Ice officer and sexually assaulting a woman. Bennett reportedly threatened to deport the woman if she did not comply. In April, a man in Indiantown, Florida, was arrested for impersonating an Ice officer and targeting immigrants. Two men reported to the police that the man had performed a fake traffic stop, and then asked for their documents and immigration status. Mike German, a former FBI agent and fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice, told the Guardian last week that the shootings of two Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota, by a suspect who allegedly impersonated a police officer, highlights the danger of police not looking like police. 'Federal agents wearing masks and casual clothing significantly increases this risk of any citizen dressing up in a way that fools the public into believing they are law enforcement so they can engage in illegal activity. It is a public safety threat, and it's also a threat to the agents and officers themselves, because people will not immediately be able to distinguish between who is engaged in legitimate activity or illegitimate activity when violence is occurring in public,' he said.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Trump admin threatens to unleash alligators on immigrants in preview of new ICE facility
The Trump administration is barreling ahead with plans to build a colossal immigration detention camp in the depths of the Florida Everglades - a compound dubbed 'Alligator Alcatraz.' The Department of Homeland Security brazenly stoked fear with an AI-generated meme showing snarling alligators in ICE baseball caps patrolling the swampy grounds of the future facility. The meme, posted on Saturday to X with the tagline 'Coming soon!', sent shockwaves through immigrant advocacy groups who denounced it as state-sponsored psychological warfare. Former US diplomat Brett Bruen slammed the stunt as a 'horrendous lack of humanity,' while national security expert Christopher Burgess called the post 'disgusting.' The plan for the $450 million-a-year complex envisions housing up to 1,000 migrants on a remote, 39-square-mile plot of marshland surrounding a defunct pilot airstrip in the Everglades, a habitat crawling with thousands of hungry pythons and an estimated 200,000 alligators. Supporters of the project, including Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, insist the swamp's lethal wildlife will function as a budget-friendly security measure to deter escape attempts. Uthmeier, a 37-year-old hardliner dubbed 'Bulldog' by allies, made no apologies in a slick, rock-music-laced promotional video touting the terrifying natural 'moat.' 'No one's getting out,' he declared triumphantly, describing the snake- and gator-infested perimeter as a 'force multiplier' to keep detainees in line. The Department of Homeland Security brazenly stoked fear with an AI-generated meme showing snarling alligators in ICE baseball caps patrolling the swampy grounds of the future facility dubbed 'Alligator Alcatraz.' 'Virtually escape-proof,' he boasted on X, claiming the plan would save taxpayer dollars on fencing and guards. 'If you get out, there's not much waiting for you except alligators and pythons.' The dystopian blueprint evokes President Trump's own suggestions during his first term of digging a medieval moat filled with deadly creatures along the southern border wall. Now, his administration appears to be giving that idea fresh legs (and scales) by threatening to move vulnerable migrants into a swampy no-man's-land patrolled by apex predators. Democrats and immigrant rights organizations erupted in outrage, accusing the administration of pushing a sadistic spectacle straight out of a horror film. 'This is not a joke - this is state-sponsored intimidation,' one activist fumed online. 'We are treating human beings like prey.' Meanwhile, environmental defenders have raced to file lawsuits against what they see as an ecological nightmare. The Friends of the Everglades and the Center for Biological Diversity argue the project could devastate a fragile wetland ecosystem that taxpayers have spent billions to protect, including habitat critical to the endangered Florida panther. 'The site is over 96 percent wetlands, surrounded by a national preserve, with incredible biodiversity,' warned Eve Samples, head of Friends of the Everglades to CBS News. 'This plan is not only cruel, it's an environmental disaster waiting to happen.' Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava also fired off a letter warning that construction would proceed without adequate study of environmental impacts, financial risks, or public safety. Yet the Trump-aligned forces behind the proposal appear determined to push forward, brushing off criticism as left-wing hysteria. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis's office insisted the swamp-based facility would be a 'force multiplier' for mass deportations, while hawking 'Alligator Alcatraz' T-shirts, baseball caps, and beverage coolers online for between $15 and $30. State and federal officials have pointed to the abandoned airstrip as a key logistical benefit, making it easier to fly detainees straight into the swamp instead of busing them from facility to facility. 'This is the best one,' Uthmeier boasted. 'It's the one-stop shop for President Trump's mass deportation mission.' The idea has sparked fierce backlash, with critics condemning it over environmental risks and calling out the inhumane conditions of detaining people in such camps, not to mention being surrounded by dangerous wildllfe Civil rights groups say the plan amounts to turning the Everglades into a weapon of fear. 'They are literally weaponizing nature against migrants,' a former immigration official said in disbelief. 'This is not a security measure. This is a grotesque form of punishment.' For now, court challenges have slowed the project, but Uthmeier and DeSantis remain defiant, promising they will bulldoze ahead in the name of 'warrior culture' and border security.


The Independent
9 hours ago
- The Independent
Trump administration taunts detained migrants with ICE alligators at proposed Florida prison
The Department of Homeland Security taunted detained migrants with an AI-generated meme depicting alligators guarding a proposed Florida prison, what critics called a 'horrendous lack of humanity.' Work has begun on the so-called 'Alligator Alcatraz' immigration detention center that's expected to cost $450 million a year in the heart of Florida's Everglades. 'Coming soon!' DHS said in a post on X Saturday, with the meme of the alligators donning Immigration and Customs Enforcement baseball caps. The department was called out on social media for the post. 'A horrendous lack of humanity,' wrote former U.S. diplomat and Georgetown lecturer Brett Bruen. Christopher Burgess, a global security expert and former CIA officer, simply said: 'Disgusting.' 'This is not a joke, it's psychological warfare dressed as meme culture,' another person said. 'This isn't a warning. It's a threat and DHS just made it official propaganda.' Some Trump administration supporters were also not impressed. 'This administration is doing good things, but the utter lack of seriousness of your comms team really sucks,' one person said. 'No one takes you seriously with posts like this.' Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, an ally of President Donald Trump, boasted this week in a social media video that the center will require minimal additional security due to its remote, swampland location, which is home to dangerous wildlife, including alligators and pythons. 'Alligator Alcatraz' would detain roughly 1,000 people in a facility on an abandoned airfield in the heart of the sprawling conservation area made up of mangrove forests and 'rivers of grass.' The idea recalls Trump's own suggestion during his first term that a medieval moat be built alongside his still-unfinished southern border wall, inhabited by deadly creatures. Friends of the Everglades and the Center for Biological Diversity filed a lawsuit Friday challenging the move to open the facility. The government's plan has not been through an environmental review as required under federal law, and the public has had no opportunity to comment, the groups claim in the suit, which named the Department of Homeland Security, ICE and the Florida Division of Emergency Management as the defendants. 'The site is more than 96 percent wetlands, surrounded by Big Cypress National Preserve, and is habitat for the endangered Florida panther and other iconic species,' Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Everglades, said. 'This scheme is not only cruel, it threatens the Everglades ecosystem that state and federal taxpayers have spent billions to protect,' she added. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said the state would oppose the lawsuit. 'Governor Ron DeSantis has insisted that Florida will be a force multiplier for federal immigration enforcement, and this facility is a necessary staging operation for mass deportations located at a pre-existing airport that will have no impact on the surrounding environment,' Bryan Griffin, the governor's spokesman, said. 'We look forward to litigating this case.' State Republicans have also been flogging 'Alligator Alcatraz' T-shirts, baseball caps, and beverage coolers from $15 to $30 on their website. More than 56,000 people are being held in immigration detention, the highest level in years and what may be an all-time record. There were 56,397 people are currently jailed in immigrant detention, according to Syracuse University's TRAC database. Internal government data obtained by CBS News suggests an even higher figure, with roughly 59,000 immigrants behind bars — or 140 percent of the agency's ostensible capacity to hold them. The figures top both the 39,000 people held in the final days of Joe Biden's administration, and the previous recent record of 55,654 in August 2019, set during the first Trump administration, which is pushing an aggressive anti-immigration agenda to revoke legal status for tens of thousands of people with a goal of arresting thousands of immigrants a day.