- Governor Maura Healey and Lt. Governor Kim Driscoll
Media Contact
Jacqueline Manning, Press Secretary
Boston — Governor Maura Healey today sent a letter to U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Todd Lyons demanding full transparency and accountability about ICE arrests and detention practices in Massachusetts.
Governor Healey is demanding that ICE provide, in one week, complete and accurate information on every person arrested in Massachusetts since January 2025, including the identity of each individual, the legal basis for each arrest, case status, detention location, court jurisdiction, and upcoming hearing dates.
In the letter, Governor Healey challenges ICE’s repeated claims that it is targeting the “worst of the worst,” citing the agency’s own public data showing that the majority of individuals arrested in Massachusetts have no criminal history.
“Many of those taken into custody are long-standing members of our communities—parents, caregivers, and workers whose sudden detention leaves their families in crisis,” Governor Healey wrote. “This has had far-reaching consequences for their children, families, our communities, and the state of Massachusetts.”
According to ICE’s own public statements, a May 2025 surge operation known as “Operation Patriot” resulted in 1,461 arrests in Massachusetts, yet 46 percent of those detained had no criminal charges or convictions. A second surge operation in September 2025, “Operation Patriot 2.0,” resulted in 1,406 arrests, with approximately 57 percent of those detained having no criminal background. ICE has released limited public information about only a small fraction of those individuals.
The letter also describes specific cases that have been reported to the administration, including an 18-year-old high school honors student with no criminal record arrested while driving to volleyball practice; a mother of a quadriplegic child detained while going to work despite having an asylum application pending; a father with no known criminal history arrested at his worksite and transferred out of state away from his young children; a young man with no criminal record arrested outside of a local grocery store as a “collateral” arrest while standing near another individual ICE was targeting; and a father who lived in the United States for more than 20 years and was detained and transferred out of state, leaving behind two U.S. citizen children. Governor Healey notes that her administration has been unable to independently verify the full details of these cases because ICE has not provided information to state or local officials.
ICE’s actions have undermined public safety and community trust, resulting in children not attending school, workers not going to work, patients missing health care appointments, and residents not coming forward as victims or witnesses.
Governor Healey has filed legislation to keep ICE out of sensitive locations including courthouses, schools, child care programs, hospitals, and places of worship to strengthen protections for families and to ensure that federal immigration enforcement does not interfere with access to education, health care, and public safety services. She also signed an executive order directing state agencies to require judicial warrants for entry into non-public areas of state facilities, limiting the use of state resources for civil immigration enforcement, and restricting participation in federal 287(g) agreements absent a clear public safety need.
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