From American Immigration Council, This Week in Immigration <[email protected]>
Subject ICE Is Using AI to Track Americans
Date February 8, 2026 3:01 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[link removed] [[link removed]]
Latest Analysis
[[link removed]]
Mission Creep: AI Surveillance at DHS Crosses Dangerous Line Into Tracking Americans [[link removed]]
The artificial intelligence (AI) tools built to guard America’s borders are now extending their policing powers into America’s neighborhoods. What began as AI-powered immigration enforcement confined primarily to our southern border is rapidly becoming something else: a quiet expansion of government surveillance into everyday life.
Immigration Enforcement Could Come to Your Town. Here’s What You Can Do to Prepare. [[link removed]]
Minneapolis has been the latest battleground for the Trump administration in its ongoing campaign of aggressive immigration enforcement. Here’s what states and localities can do if immigration agents come to their communities.
Facts You Should Know
This week, 330,000 Haitians who have been living and working in the U.S. legally – many for decades – were set to lose their Temporary Protected Status. The Trump administration had previously announced that it would terminate TPS for Haitians on February 3.
The administration claims that Haiti no longer qualifies for the designation, though the State Department currently warns U.S. citizens not to visit the country due to high rates of crime, terrorism, kidnapping, and civil unrest.
Thanks to a federal court order, Haitians will keep their immigration protections for now. The administration plans to appeal the ruling, potentially leaving the decision up to the Supreme Court.
This fact sheet from the American Immigration Council provides an overview of TPS, how countries are designated, and which countries have TPS as of November 2025.
Read more: Temporary Protected Status (TPS): An Overview [[link removed]]
Across the Nation
This week, a federal appeals court refused to reconsider our victory blocking an extreme, unconstitutional law in Iowa. This law would have made it a crime for certain immigrants to live in Iowa, even if they are now authorized to be in the United States.
If it had gone into effect, the law would have allowed local police and state courts to arrest and prosecute people for immigration status, creating huge risks of abuse. It also could have permitted states to invent and enforce their own immigration system – so a person could be welcomed in one state and arrested in another, just for crossing a state border. This goes against the Constitution, which puts enforcing immigration law in the hands of the federal government.
Thanks to this new ruling, protections remain in place and families in Iowa don't have to live in fear of a patchwork system of immigration laws.
Read more: Challenging Iowa’s State Deportation Law [[link removed]]
Quote of the Week
“They are [deportation] errors that result when different parts of the system aren't communicating well or when things are moving too fast. And things moving too fast is really where we've seen this administration lean in. The question is really, is the government making sure that an individual person is removable...? Not, 'Does somebody have legal status or not?'"
- Dara Lind, senior fellow, speaking to NPR [[link removed]]
Further Reading
USA Today: Will that warehouse become an ICE detention center? Locals push back. [[link removed]]
Slate: The Frightening, Very Real Tool ICE Agents Have to Add You to a ‘Nice Little Database’ if You Attend a Protest [[link removed]]
Wall Street Journal: States Rush to Remove Hurdles Stopping U.S. Agents From Being Sued for Shootings [[link removed]]
Sacramento Bee: New tactics replace immigration court arrests as DHS seeks to end asylum cases [[link removed]]
Rolling Stone: ICE's use of AI will lead to big mistakes. Maybe that's the point [[link removed]]
Your support fuels this work
Cut through the clutter with our focused immigration news and policy analysis. Your monthly support makes a difference.
Donate Now [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]]

American Immigration Council
1331 G St. NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC xxxxxx
United States
To make sure you keep getting these
emails, please add [email protected] [[email protected]] to your contacts or mark our emails as 'safe.'
unsubscribe: [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis