Dr. Phil and Homan spoke to an illegal immigrant who was arrested by ICE, an accused sex offender from Thailand.
Tom Homan, President Trump’s “border czar,” defended the immigration raids this weekend and pledged to continue working toward carrying out the administration’s enforcement goals in a Monday
And you're going to see a dramatic change in the country because of it." Thomas Homan, then-acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, testifies before the House Homeland ...
Thomas Homan, president Donald Trump's border czar, defended ICE raids in public schools, saying "many" gang members of MS-13 are between the ages of "14 to 17." The comment was made during a ...
Trump border czar Tom Homan invited NewsNation's Chris Cuomo to witness ICE migrant raids firsthand. Homan also expressed hope sanctuary cities will soon cooperate after seeing the agency's focus.
Trump border czar Tom Homan called MSNBC's Joy Reid "dumber than a box of rocks" after she criticized his and President Donald Trump's deportation policies.
( NewsNation) — “Border czar” Tom Homan says recently executed operations in big cities were “outstanding” and that agents arrested “numerous” Tren de Aragua gang members.
Trump border czar Tom Homan got personal after MSNBC’s Joy Reid dismissed the wave of migrant arrests as “performative.” “She’s dumber than a box of rocks,” Homan told Fox News host Jesse Watters on Tuesday.
THEY’RE HERE: The Justice Department joined immigration and other federal agency officials in Chicago on Sunday to carry out the Trump administration’s deportation operation — in a move publicized on social media alongside TV psychologist Dr. Phil, who was embedded in the action.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said federal immigration agents had begun an enforcement action in New York City. The scope was not immediately clear.
Both President Trump and Homan have vowed to locate, arrest, and eventually deport millions of migrants who entered the country unlawfully.
Analysts fear the quota could incentivize officers to target individuals who are easier to detain rather than focusing on those who pose security risks