Charges against immigration protesters in Los Angeles veer between prosecutorial errors and dubious accusations
A month and a half after 38 people were charged over the protests against ICE, only seven cases have been formalized
A month and a half after 38 people were charged over the protests against ICE, only seven cases have been formalized

Some detainees accuse authorities of ‘almost forcing’ them to sign agreements to be expelled

In Florida, where immigrants make up 40% to 75% of senior care workers, the president’s campaign of mass deportations has led to a labor shortage

The artist recounts the beatings he endured, some for daring to sing, during the four months he was imprisoned in El Salvador’s Cecot

He became an activist after retiring in 2015, developing and perfecting a system to independently account for deportation planes. He is now passing the baton to a non-profit that will continue his work

ICE launches a hiring campaign targeting retired agents to carry out the largest deportation effort in history, as desired by Trump

Every day, migrants expelled by the Trump administration arrive in Guatemala. Others are turning back before even reaching the US-Mexico border, defeated by the growing difficulties. Returnees carry with them a sense of failure

Alejandro Barranco tells EL PAÍS about the nightmare he experienced following his father’s arrest, and the hope he still has after going to the Senate Subcommittee on Border Security and Immigration

Faced with an explosion of new cases and a much more aggressive administration, the fewer than 20,000 specialized lawyers in the US are on the verge of collapse, but they continue working to defend their clients

Lawyers for Daniel Lozano-Camargo, identified as ‘Cristian’ in court documents, claim the youth was used as a ‘pawn’ in the exchange between the three countries

Their father says they haven’t been able to see their lawyer since their arrest two weeks ago. Fourteen Mexicans are detained at the Trump immigration center

Over the course of a month, EL PAÍS followed the daily lives of several men held in a prison for foreigners that they call a ‘living hell.’ Speaking from the inside, they described the appalling conditions, the climate of fear, and the lives that have been taken from them by Trump’s anti-immigrant crusade

Survivor-advocates warn of the harm caused by immigration raids: ‘These women are more likely to die now’

US immigration authorities have begun demanding data through subpoenas that are not signed by any judge, presumably to locate undocumented individuals
Immigration agents will use information from the public health insurance program to locate and deport undocumented immigrants, according to AP

While authorities insist that no one will be turned away based on immigration status, recent local-federal enforcement deals are fueling mistrust

Cheap foreign labor have long been a fixture outside these stores, but recent immigration raids nationwide are now driving job-seekers away

The chases by ICE agents in Camarillo and Carpinteria were chaotic, leading to around 100 arrests. The Trump administration accuses the farms of exploiting juveniles

The image of an immigration officer carrying out an arrest with his face covered has become a symbol of Trump’s immigration policy. Several initiatives seek to curb the practice

Independently compiled data shows a dramatic increase since mid-May to 209. With the larger immigration budget approved in the mega-tax law, this number is expected to rise

The case of a founding member of a small independent union representing Indigenous farmworkers in Washington raises concerns about potential persecution of migrant labor activists

The journalist was arrested on June 14 while covering anti-Trump protests and was placed in deportation proceedings a few days later. He was released on bail this week but was immediately arrested again on new charges

Intense immigration operations are leaving farms empty and crops abandoned. Farmers warn that the crisis could collapse an essential industry

Immigration Service data shows that detentions in the state are double those in Florida and triple those in California

Around half of the country’s Hispanic population worries they or someone close to them could be deported, compared to only 15% of whites

The presence of immigration officers, fire risks, and funding shortages have led some areas to cancel their celebrations

Judge Randolph Moss determined that the government overstepped its authority and violated U.S. immigration law