Federal immigration authorities say President Donald Trump’s second term has already delivered sweeping enforcement results, with thousands of violent gang members taken off the streets as part of an aggressive crackdown aimed at restoring public safety and border control.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced Tuesday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested roughly 7,000 gang members during the first year of Trump’s second administration.
Officials framed the milestone as evidence of a broader shift toward interior enforcement focused on individuals accused of serious crimes rather than low-level immigration violations.
DHS said those arrested were connected to offenses ranging from homicide and armed robbery to drug and human trafficking.
The agency reported targeting members and associates of several violent gangs operating across the country, including MS-13, Tren de Aragua, the Latin Kings, the Trinitarios, the Nortenos and the Mexican Mafia.
Administration officials emphasized that many of those taken into custody had previously been deported or released into the United States before reentering illegally.
The agency said that some individuals had accumulated lengthy criminal records while living in American communities, prompting renewed criticism of past enforcement policies.
DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the arrests reflect a deliberate effort to focus federal resources on the most dangerous offenders.
“In President Trump’s first year in office, ICE arrested 7,000 gang members,” McLaughlin said. “When we say we are targeting the worst of the worst, this is exactly what we mean.”
McLaughlin added that the enforcement surge aligns with DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s priorities, which center on large-scale deportations and expanded cooperation with law enforcement agencies nationwide.
According to DHS officials, the strategy is intended to deliver immediate public safety benefits while deterring future illegal entry.
Federal authorities highlighted several recent arrests involving individuals accused or convicted of crimes such as homicide, kidnapping, armed carjacking and drug smuggling.
Some of those arrested had previously been released into the country despite known gang affiliations, officials noted.
FBI Director Kash Patel credited increased coordination between federal, state and local agencies for the rise in gang enforcement actions.
In a social media statement, Patel said the administration’s approach had led to a dramatic increase in takedowns of organized criminal networks operating within U.S. borders.
Patel reported that the FBI saw a 210 percent increase in gang takedowns in 2025 compared with the previous year, attributing the surge to newly established task forces working directly with local departments.
He also pointed to what he described as a 20 percent decline in the national murder rate tied to coordinated enforcement efforts.
The enforcement push comes amid wider immigration policy changes during Trump’s second term, including expanded deportation operations and the termination of Temporary Protected Status for several countries, according to Just the News.
Administration officials argue the measures are necessary to reverse what they describe as years of lax enforcement and to restore deterrence at both the border and within the interior.
While immigration advocacy groups have criticized the administration’s approach, DHS officials maintain that the enforcement numbers demonstrate measurable gains in public safety.
With thousands of gang members either removed from the country or facing deportation proceedings, officials say intensified operations will continue throughout Trump’s second term.
