Skip to main content

Support WBUR

More than 7,000 ICE arrests in Massachusetts so far under Trump

Immigration arrests in Massachusetts skyrocketed over the first 15 months of the Trump administration, representing a nearly fivefold increase compared to a similar period at the end of President Joe Biden’s term.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested more than 7,030 people in Massachusetts under President Trump, according to a WBUR analysis of data compiled by the Deportation Data Project. That’s nearly five times the 1,470 immigrants arrested here in the final 415 days of the Biden administration.

The arrests have ensnared people from 100 countries, with the highest numbers coming from Brazil and Guatemala. They took place at local courthouses, police departments, the federal courthouse in Boston and in the streets of Massachusetts cities and towns.

The data, obtained from ICE through public records requests by the Deportation Data Project, runs through March 10.

Despite claims by Trump administration officials that they’re targeting the "worst of the worst" in their immigrant crackdown, the new data backs up previous reporting that people without criminal records have widely become targets for enforcement.

Under Trump, nearly half the immigrants arrested, or 46%, had no pending criminal charges or convictions; they were marked only for being in the country without legal status. Those with convictions made up 19% of the arrests, and 35% of the people have pending criminal charges.

During the 415 days reviewed from the Biden administration, 36% of people arrested had criminal records and 38% had pending charges. Only a quarter of the total were arrested for civil immigration infractions, such as an expired visa or having entered the country without authorization.

The raw number of those arrested with criminal convictions has more than doubled, from 530 under Biden to 1,303 for the same amount of days under Trump. The nature of the convictions is not spelled out in the data. However, some of the cases are detailed by “threat level.” Under Trump, 693 people, or 10% of those listed with a threat level, had the highest category of aggravated felony.

Of the many places where ICE detained people over this period, at least 210 arrests were labeled in association with 32 local police departments. ICE officials routinely complain that they don’t get enough help from local police departments, but the data may reflect cooperation from numerous departments, particularly in Lawrence and Boston.

Courthouses are another ICE hotspot. According to the ICE data, 544 arrests took place at local and federal courthouses. And that's likely an undercount; the Massachusetts Trial Court, which oversees the state and local courts, reported 726 ICE arrests from January 2025 through February this year.

According to the data, nearly 500 of the total arrested were juveniles or were not detained.

Editor's Note: An earlier version of this story undercounted the total number of arrests in the Trump administration by three individuals. This story has also been updated to clarify the number and nature of police departments named in the ICE data. We regret the errors.

This article was originally published on April 01, 2026.

Related:

Headshot of Simón Rios
Simón Rios Reporter

Simón Rios is reporter, covering immigration, politics and local enterprise stories for WBUR.

More…

Support WBUR

Support WBUR

Listen Live