Governor Ron DeSantis pledged to veto the recently passed immigration bill backed by Republicans in the legislature.
Immigration enforcement efforts across Florida are ramping up, leading to increased detentions and heightened concerns among immigrant communities.
Gov. Ron DeSantis sealed an agreement with state law enforcement in Southwest Florida in an attempt to tackle illegal immigration.
Agents with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) were spotted at a home along Everson Miles Circle. NBC2 crews at the scene received the photo pictured above from a neighbor as FDLE vehicles lined up in front of the home. We have reached out to FDLE to find out the nature of this investigation.
Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a memorandum that could soon give highway patrol officers some of the power of federal immigration agents.
The Florida Legislature passed a bill to address illegal immigration, shifting significant responsibilities from the governor to the agriculture commissioner.
British national jailed in Miami for voting illegally six times in US elections while using fake documents to claim citizenship.
There have been 1,016 arrests and 814 "detainers lodged" in the U.S. as of midnight, Jan. 29, according to a post by ICE.
At least 27 agencies across the nation are currently listed as having submitted applications to the program, including agencies in Texas, Georgia, Montana, Oklahoma and Louisiana. Nearly half of the pending applications are from Florida law enforcement agencies.
"Florida schools will cooperate with all law enforcement working to enforce the nation’s laws on illegal immigration and keep our schools safe," Sydney Booker, spokesperson for the Florida Department of Education, told the USA TODAY Network – Florida ...
The Trump administration has directed federal prosecutors to limit enforcement of a federal law safeguarding abortion centers, reproductive health centers and pregnancy resource centers, calling the Biden administration's previous use of longstanding protection "the prototypical example" of weaponization of the federal government.
While President Trump granted clemency last week to more than 1,500 people involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, at least two Florida men who were among those defendants have yet to celebrate.