Just have a minute? Here are the top stories you need to know about immigration. This summary was featured in Documented’s Early Arrival newsletter. You can subscribe to receive it in your inbox three times per week here.
Washington, D.C.
DACA renewal delays fuel worries Trump is quietly undermining ‘Dreamers’:
The backlog of renewal cases for DACA recipients awaiting processing at USCIS has increased dramatically, and approvals have ground to a halt under Trump. —Politico
DHS scraps plans to turn Georgia warehouse into detention mega center, city says:
Four months after purchasing the building, the Trump administration is backing away from plans to convert a warehouse in Georgia into an ICE detention facility. —CNN
Immigration crackdown lifts private-prison stocks 📈
Shares of Geo Group, CoreCivic are up 82% and 51% in 2026, respectively. They’re some of the best performing stocks this year. [Paywall] —WSJ
New York
Immigration authorities kept an 8-year-old US citizen in a Brooklyn shelter for nearly seven months:
A lawsuit accuses federal officials of ignoring evidence that the boy, born in Mexico, held U.S. citizenship through his mother. — NY Focus
Where billionaires summer, a gardener died in the snow:
A landscaper’s difficult life and lonely death reveal the human cost behind the Hamptons’ manicured landscape. —New York Times
Around the U.S.
During Trump’s immigration crackdown, Minnesota protester remained shackled in hospital for days:
The story of one progressive activist shows what critics say is the aggressive nature of the Trump administration’s response to those protesting the immigration crackdown. — New York Times
Florida still owes $603 million on immigration enforcement contracts:
According to the Florida Phoenix, 27 companies that helped build the state’s migrant lockups are still waiting to get paid. —Florida Phoenix
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Chinese dissidents once hoped the US would lead the world to democracy. Now they’re being detained by ICE.
Despite current democratic backsliding, many Chinese dissidents still see the U.S. as a beacon and reference point for changes they want to see in their home country. —American Community Media
Canada’s policies force asylum seekers into US to face deportation, critics say:
Advocates say the Safe Third Country Agreement forces immigrants to head to an unsafe country: the United States. —The Guardian
