Immigration Crackdown 2026: What ICE Is Actually Doing in Your State
Immigration enforcement in 2026 has expanded significantly under the current administration’s policies. Here’s what’s actually happening — by state, by community, and by the numbers.
The Numbers So Far in 2026
- ICE arrests in Q1 2026: 73,000+ (up 32% from Q1 2025)
- Deportations completed: 42,000+
- Individuals in detention: 55,000+ (highest in recorded history)
Which States Are Seeing the Most Activity
Highest enforcement activity: Texas, California, New York, Florida, Illinois
Sanctuary cities: Denver, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco have limited cooperation with ICE detainer requests, though federal law allows ICE to operate independently regardless.
Workplace Raids
ICE has expanded worksite operations in 2026, targeting agricultural operations, meatpacking plants, construction sites, and restaurants. Employers hiring undocumented workers now face fines of $250–$10,000 per undocumented employee.
What Immigrants Should Know
- You have the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney regardless of immigration status
- Do not open your door to agents who don’t have a judicial warrant signed by a judge
- An ICE administrative warrant is not the same as a judicial warrant
- Contact an immigration attorney immediately if detained
📌 Source: DHS data, ACLU reporting. For legal advice, consult an immigration attorney.