ICE is cutting back on cuffing immigrants in court and warrantless arrests: report
ICE is cutting back on cuffing immigrants in court and warrantless arrests: report
ICE is cutting back on cuffing immigrants in court and warrantless arrests: report
Trump administration appears to be backing off two major tactics that led to chaotic and violent scenes in his mass depoitation campaign

Donald Trump’s administration has reportedly instructed immigration enforcement officers to cut back on arrests inside courthouses and to no longer enter homes without a warrant, backing off two controversial policies that have sparked violent and chaotic scenes in the president's mass deportation campaign.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement field offices across the country were verbally instructed by their superiors that they should no longer enter homes unless they have a judicial warrant, two Homeland Security officials told NBC News.
Last year, ICE’s then-acting director Todd Lyons told officers to rely on the agency’s own permissions to enter a person’s home — rather than seek a warrant from a judge. Homeland Security then issued a lengthy press release defending the policy.