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ICE arrested more than 800 people after tips from TSA, investigation shows

ICE agents walk through Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall airport in Maryland on 30 March 2026. Photograph: Bonnie Cash/UPI/ShutterstockView image in fullscreenICE agents walk through Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall airport in Maryland on 30 March 2026. Photograph: Bonnie Cash/UPI/ShutterstockICE arrested more than 800 people after tips from TSA, investigation showsReuters uncovers that the TSA shared more than 31,000 traveler records with ICE for immigration enforcement

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested more than 800 people following tips shared by federal airport security officials from the start of Donald Trump’s second presidency through February 2026, according to internal agency data reviewed by Reuters – a figure far above what was previously publicly known.

The leads came from the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which supplied ICE with records on more than 31,000 travelers for possible immigration enforcement, the data showed.

Reuters could not determine how many arrests took place inside airports, although the TSA tips would mainly be useful in determining when a person would be traveling.

Read moreICE and the TSA are part of the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The agencies have historically shared information related to national security threats, but they began focusing on routine immigration arrests after the start of Trump’s second presidency as part of his mass deportation effort.

The 31,000 traveler records were gathered by TSA’s Secure Flight Program, which was created in 2007 to allow the agency to review passenger information for people who may be on US government watchlists. The program was intended as a counter-terrorism measure, not to track down immigration offenders, according to the regulation outlining its purpose. The DHS did not respond to questions about the TSA providing passenger information to ICE. But the TSA said that under Trump it “is pursuing solutions that improve resiliency, security and efficiency across our entire system”.

Figures for arrests and traveler records that TSA shared with ICE before Trump’s second Oval Office term were unavailable.

US airports and immigration enforcement have been at the center of a partisan funding fight since mid-February, when Democrats refused to support additional money for the Republican president’s immigration crackdown without reforms to scale back aggressive tactics.

The standoff blocked the passage of a bill to fund the DHS, which caused TSA security officers to miss at least two full paychecks. After some unpaid TSA officers began calling in sick, Trump deployed ICE officers to more than a dozen airports in March to aid security efforts.

Read moreDemocrats have criticized the deployment and called on the Trump administration to remove them. A group of more than 40 Democrats in the US House of Representatives recently wrote in a letter to the newly installed homeland security secretary, Markwayne Mullin, that ICE officers “will cause confusion and fear” if allowed to remain in airports.

Several cases of ICE officers arresting travelers in US airports have sparked backlash. ICE officers detained a college student traveling from Boston to Texas to celebrate Thanksgiving in November and arrested a sobbing mother at the San Francisco international airport the day before Trump’s airport deployment began.

The DHS defended both arrests and said both of the people involved were subject to final orders of removal.

Reuters spoke with three immigration attorneys who said they were familiar with cases of people without legal immigration status being arrested in airports.

One of the lawyers, Christina Canty, said the cases included an Irish couple who had lived in the US for more than two decades and were detained in the summer of 2025 by immigration authorities in front of their children when trying to fly from Florida to New York after a vacation.

The parents – who had pending applications for permanent residency – were deported and left their two young children, ages seven and 10, with adult siblings in the US, Canty said.

In another case, a Chinese woman with a final order of removal who was seeking permanent residence was detained by ICE at the Atlanta airport en route to Philadelphia, one of the attorneys said.

Read original at The Guardian

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