President Trump’s newly installed Homeland Security secretary, Kristi Noem, announced on Tuesday morning that federal immigration agents had begun an enforcement action in New York City.
Ms. Noem, who oversees the federal agency that runs the nation’s immigration system, posted a video on X that she said showed an “enforcement operation” in New York that had led to the arrest of an unauthorized immigrant with kidnapping, assault and burglary charges.
The video, which seemed to be taken before dawn, shows two officers outside an apartment building at an undisclosed location guiding a man in handcuffs to an SUV with flashing lights. A spokeswoman for the Immigration Customs and Enforcement field office in New York City declined to provide any additional details of the arrest or say whether other operations were in progress.
Ms. Noem wrote on X that “dirtbags like this will continue to be removed from our streets.” She arrived in New York to accompany the enforcement effort; in her first predawn post on X, she said she was “live this AM from NYC. I’m on it.”
It was not immediately clear whether ICE was conducting other arrests in the city or where, but a spokeswoman for Ms. Noem said there were “multiple” enforcement operations in New York on Tuesday.
A spokeswoman for Mayor Eric Adams of New York, a Democrat who has sought to collaborate with Mr. Trump in his efforts to deport criminals, did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Ms. Noem’s arrival in New York City came two days after a multiagency immigration crackdown in Chicago on Sunday. The Trump administration is heavily publicizing such arrests across the nation, from Colorado and the Atlanta suburbs to Hawaii and Puerto Rico.
ICE, which began posting daily tallies of arrests on social media, has reported more than 3,500 arrests nationwide since Mr. Trump took office, and a total of 1,179 in a single day on Monday. That daily count is larger than the average 310 arrests a day during Mr. Biden’s final year.
Federal officials did not say how many people they arrested in Chicago, but Thomas Homan, the president’s border czar, told The Times on Sunday that ICE had targeted those with criminal backgrounds. He also confirmed that there had been “collateral arrests” of immigrants who were near the targets of the operations.
Trump officials have indicated they are focused on people who threaten public before casting a wider net.
“My goal is to arrest as many public safety and national security threats as possible and move on to the other priorities,” Mr. Homan, the face of the crackdown, told CNN on Sunday.
ICE has a field office in Lower Manhattan with a staff of nearly 400 people in charge of conducting arrests of noncitizens in New York City, Long Island and parts of the Hudson Valley.
Under former President Joseph R. Biden Jr., the agency arrested 4,667 people in the 2024 fiscal year in the region, or an average of about 12 a day. That was down from 9,229 people in 2023, or about 25 a day.
Ms. Noem, a former South Dakota governor and longtime ally of Mr. Trump, runs the Homeland Security Department, which houses ICE, as well as Customs and Border Protection.
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