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ICE activity increases in Maine as anxiety grows in immigrant communities
Buildings on the working waterfront catch the early morning light, Feb. 26, 2025, in Portland, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)2026-01-21T20:28:30Z PORTLAND, Maine (AP) The Trump administration is now targeting Maine in its mass deportation campaign, a state with relatively few residents in the United States illegally but a notable presence refugees in its largest cities, particularly from Africa.Reports of immigration arrests over the last week have struck fear in immigrant communities of Portland and Lewiston and prompted backlash from Gov. Janet Mills and other Democrats, including a refusal to help ICE agents obscure the identity of their vehicles by issueing undercover license plates.The Department of Homeland Security named the operation Catch of the Day, an apparent play on Maines seafood industry, just as it has done for other enforcement surges, like Metro Surge in Minnesota and Midway Blitz in Chicago. The departments arrest target of 1,000 Maine residents, reported by Fox News Channel, would make it a significant operation but far from the largest. Portland and Lewiston have thousands of residents of African descent, including many from Somalia.Somali immigration into Maine accelerated in the early 2000s, and the state now has one of the highest percentages of Somali residents in the country. Immigrants and asylum seekers from other countries followed. Now the presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents is causing great anxiety in Portland, said city council member Pious Ali, a native of Ghana. Our schools have seen about a quarter of immigrants not showing up, Ali said, and many fear going to work as well: There are immigrants who live here who work in our hospitals, they work in our schools, they work in our hotels, they are part of the economic engine of our community. ICE agents dont need to spread trauma by smashing doors and windows, he said: The federal government has the ability to contact these people without unleashing fear into our communities. Dozens of arrestsThe enforcement action is arriving in Maine, a mostly rural state with about 1.4 million residents, as confrontations between ICE and demonstrators continue in Minnesota, where ICE is under scrutiny following an agents fatal shooting of Renee Good.ICE didnt respond to a request for comment Wednesday on the agencys plans for Maine, where U.S. Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that increased enforcement began on Tuesday. ICE Deputy Assistant Director Patricia Hyde told FOX News that it had made 50 arrests by Tuesday and has more than 1,000 targets in the state.We have launched Operation Catch of the Day to target the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens in the state. On the first day of operations, we arrested illegal aliens convicted of aggravated assault, false imprisonment, and endangering the welfare of a child, said Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin in a statement. No new undercover license platesSecretary of State Shenna Bellows, a longtime opponent of President Donald Trump, said state officials received a request from U.S. Customs and Border Protection for confidential, undercover Maine license plates and decided against issuing them. The licenses plates are used on unmarked vehicles and Bellows said she wants more assurance they will be used appropriately. ICEs use of license plates in other states has raised concerns: Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, a Democrat, issued a warning to ICE agents last year that swapping or altering license plates is illegal.These requests in light of rumors of ICE deployment to Maine and abuses of power in Minnesota and elsewhere raise concerns. We have not revoked existing plates but have paused issuance of new plates. We want to be assured that Maine plates will not be used for lawless purposes, Bellows said.Bellows has run afoul of Trump and his administration before. In 2023, she sought to remove his presidential candidacy from the states ballot, arguing that Trump had engaged in insurrection in violation of the 14th Amendment. More recently, she has refused to hand over the states voter rolls to the federal government. Customs and Border Protection did not respond to a request seeking comment, but a top Maine Republican said withholding the undercover plates would jeopardize public safety.That really, one, puts us at odds as a state. Puts us at one end of an extreme that we really shouldnt be on, Senate Leader Trey Stewart said.Maines top federal prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Andrew Benson joined Democrats in calling for any demonstrations in the state to remain peaceful and civil. Benson, a Trump appointee, warned people to stay out of the agents way or be prosecuted.Mayor, governors speak outGov. Mills has pushed back, as have mayors, school district leaders and numerous community organizations. Mills said aggressive enforcement actions that undermine civil rights are not welcome.Lewiston Mayor Carl Sheline said ICE enforcement has been causing anxiety, fear or uncertainty for many. Portland Mayor Mark Dion and the citys school district issued statements acknowledging its a nervous time for many.There is no evidence of unchecked criminal activity in our community requiring a disproportionate presence of federal agents, Dion said. Schools, Democrats call for cautionPortland Public Schools, the largest and most diverse school district in the state, said in a statement Wednesday that it conducted a lockout at two schools to prevent anyone from entering the building during the school day Tuesday because of concerns about ICE activity nearby.It was quickly determined that there was no threat to our school communities and the lockouts were lifted within minutes. This is an understandably tense time in our community, as reports and rumors of immigration enforcement actions grow, the districts statement said.Maine Democrats have condemned the ICE activity.The Trump administration has deployed ICE agents to Portland, Lewiston, and possibly other Maine communities. This is not about public safety. It is about fear, control, and political theater, Devon Murphy-Anderson, executive director of the Maine Democratic Party, said in a statement Wednesday. PATRICK WHITTLE Whittle is an Associated Press reporter based in Portland, Maine. He focuses on the environment and oceans. twitter mailto
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