ICE Arrested 393,000 People Last Year. 39% Had No Criminal Record.

Resist Now Updated June 23, 2026 2 min read
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393,000 Arrests. 153,000 Had No Criminal Record.

ICE made 393,000 arrests in the first year of the second Trump administration. Of those, 153,000 were “administrative arrests” of people with zero criminal record. Less than 14% of those arrested had violent criminal records. Less than 2% had homicide or sexual assault charges.

393,000 arrests. 153,000 with no criminal record. $170 billion allocated through 2029. 18 people died in detention. The ombudsman office has zero funding.

Congress allocated $170 billion to ICE and Border Patrol through September 2029, targeting one million deportations per year. The budget keeps growing while oversight keeps shrinking. The Immigration Detention Ombudsman has zero current funding.

What Enforcement Without Limits Looks Like

Eighteen people died in immigration detention this year. ICE held approximately 170 children on an average day — a six-fold increase from January 2025. ProPublica documented that ICE detained the parents of 11,000 U.S. citizen children in seven months.

In Chicago, 300 masked agents raided an apartment building at 1:00 AM. Four U.S. citizen children were zip-tied. In agriculture, 155,000 farm workers disappeared between March and July 2025. Wholesale vegetable prices jumped 39%.

The enforcement is not targeted at public safety threats. It is sweeping up workers, parents, and taxpayers who pay $96.7 billion in annual taxes.

What You Can Do

  1. Demand detention oversight →
  2. Call your U.S. senators and demand that ICE funding include independent oversight and due process protections.
  3. Read the immigration hub for the full picture.

Update, June 23, 2026: The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in Blanche v. Lau that border officers do not need clear and convincing evidence that a lawful permanent resident committed a crime before reclassifying them as an applicant for admission rather than a returning resident. Justice Clarence Thomas wrote the majority opinion; Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, writing that the Court had handed the government a “massive blank check” to diminish the legal protections attached to a green card.

The case centered on Muk Choi Lau, a Chinese-born green card holder charged with trademark counterfeiting in New Jersey in 2012, whose green card was confiscated when he re-entered the United States from abroad. The Second Circuit had ruled in his favor, finding the government lacked sufficient evidence at the time of reclassification, but the Supreme Court vacated that judgment.

Nancy Morawetz, director of the Crimmigration Clinic at NYU, told Mother Jones she expects border officers to “overuse” the authority the ruling grants, particularly against green card holders with drug-related charges. Allen Orr, former president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said the decision lowers the due process threshold green card holders are entitled to and reported that clients with green cards are already refusing to travel internationally.

Sources

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