12/17/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/17/2025 17:32
Markey slams Trump's brutal immigration enforcement campaign
Washington (December 17, 2025) - Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) today wrote to David Wesling, Boston Acting Field Office Director for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations, demanding answers about the treatment of people detained in the ICE field office in Burlington, Massachusetts, and the aggressive enforcement tactics ICE has employed in immigrant communities. On December 12, Senator Markey conducted an inspection of the Burlington facility and questioned the field office leadership on the inadequate detention conditions and ICE's arrest dragnet. Senator Markey continues his oversight because the lives of immigrants in the Commonwealth and across New England hang in the balance.
In the letter, Senator Markey writes, "The experiences of people processed and detained at Burlington are especially concerning in the broader national policy context. The Trump administration's immigration agenda, which guides ICE's enforcement philosophy, has embraced an extremist, anti-immigrant ideology that treats vulnerable families as political targets, not human beings deserving of dignity. Across the country - and acutely in Massachusetts - this Administration's approach has fanned fear, eroded trust in government, and weaponized federal power against long-settled neighbors who contribute to our communities every day. Burlington is not an aberration; it is the predictable result of a national strategy that prioritizes cruelty over community safety."
Senator Markey lists several cases of ICE detaining people at routine immigration appointments, operating without transparency or accountability, and conducting arrests using dangerous tactics.
Senator Markey continues, "During the enforcement surge in September 2025, reporting indicates that more than half of those arrested had no criminal records or criminal charges. Only 2 percent of those arrested in Massachusetts between September 4 and September 30 had convictions for violent crimes, while 63 percent had no criminal charges at all. The data demonstrates that the public safety justification ICE repeatedly invokes bears no resemblance to the reality on the ground, a reality that becomes painfully clear through the individual stories emerging from our communities."
Senator Markey concludes, "These incidents reflect an agency operating far beyond acceptable standards, which brings me back to the questions I raised during my visit on December 12. I asked about specific Massachusetts cases of excessive force, ICE's sweeping operations, and the lack of transparency surrounding arrests and detention practices. I remain deeply concerned about the tactics being used and the impact on Massachusetts communities. Advocates have labeled the degree of terror in communities across the region as unprecedented. Fear has spread so profoundly that when word of an arrest circulates, school attendance drops as families fear their children being detained. Workers are afraid to go to their jobs. Families remain behind locked doors."
Senator Markey requests answers to the following questions by December 31, 2025:
Senator Markey is continuing his efforts to hold the Trump administration accountable for its violations of people's constitutional rights and its gross weaponization of immigration enforcement.
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