Trump's 2025 deportations top 605,000 with new criminal cases

Concluding 2025, the Trump administration deported over 605,000 illegal immigrants—exceeding Obama-era records of 432,000 but short of the 1 million annual goal—while 1.9 million others departed voluntarily, per DHS. Continuing prior coverage of high-profile criminal removals, recent cases include a Venezuelan influencer, a repeat abuser, and a sex trafficker.

Federal data confirms 605,000 deportations by year's end, topping the 2013 Obama high-water mark. The focus remains on criminals, adding to earlier highlighted cases.

Leonel Moreno, a Venezuelan social media influencer who entered illegally in 2022, promoted welfare exploitation in videos. Arrested in Ohio in 2024 for missing check-ins, he was deported in March after the Trump team secured Venezuela's acceptance, succeeding where Biden failed.

Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, a Mexican previously deported in 2013, faced charges of strangulation, battery, and domestic abuse. Arrested in April after a Wisconsin judge's intervention led to a courthouse chase, he was removed in November.

Rafael Alberto Cadena-Sosa, a Mexican sex trafficker, ran a Miami ring luring girls as young as 14 into 12-hour daily prostitution. Convicted in 2015 of involuntary servitude, he was arrested in California before deportation.

Aldrin Guerrero-Munoz, convicted of murdering his 3-month-old son in Minneapolis and sentenced to 32 years, was deported after a prison assault; ICE took custody in October.

Jung Choi, a South Korean convicted of voluntary manslaughter for killing her companion's wife in 2017 near San Juan Batista, California (11-year sentence), was also recently removed.

These cases underscore the criminal prioritization amid debates over community impacts.

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Illustration of MAGA-aligned coalition releasing playbook urging mass worksite deportations and 1 million removals.
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MAGA-aligned coalition publishes playbook urging expanded worksite enforcement to boost deportations in 2026

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A MAGA-aligned group calling itself the Mass Deportation Coalition released a playbook on April 1 urging the Trump administration to make large-scale worksite immigration enforcement a central tool for increasing deportations, arguing the goal should be at least 1 million formal removals in 2026. The document, which invokes President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s enforcement-era example, also recommends tightening employment verification and using a broader “whole-of-government” approach that could heighten tensions with industries that rely heavily on unauthorized labor.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said it has deported several noncitizens convicted of violent crimes, including homicide, rape and assault, as the Trump administration highlights enforcement figures ahead of President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. ICE and the Department of Homeland Security have said removals since Trump returned to office have exceeded 670,000, and the administration also claims more than 2 million people have left the country voluntarily.

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A coalition of President Donald Trump's allies has formed to pressure the administration into resuming mass deportations of all unauthorized immigrants, not just violent criminals. This push comes amid a reported shift in White House messaging following controversial ICE operations. Meanwhile, Democratic-led cities in Republican states debate how to limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.

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