Rescission of ICE Sensitive Locations Policy — Churches, Schools, and Hospitals Open to Raids
The rescission of the sensitive locations policy removed decades-old protections for churches, schools, hospitals, courthouses, and shelters from immigration enforcement. The change unleashed a dramatic surge in arrests of non-criminal immigrants and chilled access to essential services including healthcare and education.
On January 20, 2025, the Trump administration rescinded the longstanding policy protecting churches, schools, hospitals, and other sensitive locations from ICE enforcement operations. The policy change led to a 2,450% surge in arrests of people with no criminal record, rising from 6% of ICE detainees in January 2025 to 41% by December 2025. ICE's detainee population reached a record 73,000.
Executive summary
What this record documents
- On January 20, 2025, the Trump administration rescinded the DHS Protected Areas policy via executive order 'Protecting the American People Against Invasion,' removing protections for churches, schools, hospitals, courthouses, shelters, and childcare facilities from ICE operations.
- Arrests of people with no criminal record surged 2,450% in Trump's first year — from 6% of ICE detainees in January 2025 to 41% by December 2025.
- ICE's detainee population reached a record high of 73,000, with the daily arrest quota increased from 1,000 to 3,000 beginning in May 2025.
- Documented raids occurred near schools in Denver and outside churches in Washington, D.C. — locations that had been protected under every administration since 2011.
- Healthcare utilization by immigrant families dropped measurably, children's school attendance declined, and access to domestic violence shelters and food banks was chilled by fear of enforcement.
Timeline
Sequence of events
January 20, 2025
Executive order rescinds sensitive locations protections
President Trump signs executive order 'Protecting the American People Against Invasion,' directing DHS to rescind the Biden-era Protected Areas policy. ICE agents are now permitted to conduct enforcement at churches, schools, hospitals, courthouses, and shelters at their discretion.
March 12, 2025
Venable LLP publishes legal analysis of policy implications
Legal analysis details the scope of the rescission, noting that the original sensitive locations policy had been in place since 2011 under the Obama administration and was expanded by Biden in 2021 to cover additional locations including playgrounds, bus stops, and homeless shelters.
May 1, 2025
ICE increases daily arrest quota to 3,000
ICE raises its daily arrest target from 1,000 to 3,000, leading to a surge in 'collateral arrests' — people not initially targeted who are swept up during enforcement operations near previously protected locations.
June 30, 2025
Nearly half of June arrests are non-criminal
Data shows that nearly half of ICE arrests in June 2025 involved individuals with no criminal convictions, up from 23% in May. The trend accelerates through the year.
December 31, 2025
Non-criminal arrests reach 41% of detainee population
By year's end, 41% of ICE detainees have no criminal record, a 2,450% increase from January. ICE's total detainee population reaches a record 73,000. Reports document chilling effects on healthcare, education, and access to social services in immigrant communities.
January 7, 2026
Non-criminal detainees reach 24,644
Data shows 24,644 non-criminal detainees in ICE custody, up from 945 on January 26, 2025 — a 2,500% surge in absolute numbers.
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
On January 20, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order titled "Protecting the American People Against Invasion," which directed the Department of Homeland Security to rescind the Protected Areas policy that had shielded sensitive locations from immigration enforcement operations since 2011. The policy had protected churches, schools, hospitals, courthouses, homeless shelters, and other locations where vulnerable people access essential services.
The Biden administration had expanded the policy in 2021 to cover additional locations including playgrounds, school bus stops, domestic violence shelters, drug treatment facilities, and locations where children gather. The Trump rescission eliminated all of these protections, replacing them with agent discretion.
The Surge in Non-Criminal Arrests
The consequences were immediate and dramatic. ICE increased its daily arrest quota from 1,000 to 3,000 in May 2025. By June, nearly half of all ICE arrests involved people with no criminal convictions — up from 23% in May. By December 2025, 41% of ICE's record 73,000 detainees had no criminal record, a 2,450% increase from January.
In absolute numbers, the non-criminal detainee population grew from 945 on January 26, 2025 to 24,644 by January 7, 2026 — a 2,500% surge.
Raids at Previously Protected Locations
Reports documented ICE enforcement operations near schools in Denver and outside churches in Washington, D.C. These were locations that had been explicitly protected from immigration enforcement for over a decade.
Chilling Effects on Essential Services
The rescission created measurable chilling effects across immigrant communities. Healthcare utilization dropped as families avoided hospitals and clinics. School attendance declined as children in immigrant families were afraid to attend. Access to domestic violence shelters, food banks, and social services was suppressed by fear of enforcement.
Legal Analysis
The sensitive locations policy was not merely a matter of enforcement discretion — it operationalized fundamental rights protections recognized under international law:
- ICCPR Article 18 (Freedom of Religion): Enforcement operations at houses of worship directly interfere with the free exercise of religion.
- ICESCR Article 12 (Right to Health): The chilling effect on healthcare access — documented by Holland & Knight and healthcare systems nationwide — undermines the right to the highest attainable standard of health.
- ICESCR Article 13 (Right to Education): When children are afraid to attend school because of ICE presence, the right to education is effectively denied.
- Convention on the Rights of the Child Article 28: Children's right to education is specifically protected regardless of their parents' immigration status.
Why This Is Classified Severe
- Scale: A 2,450% increase in non-criminal arrests affecting tens of thousands of people, with a record 73,000 detainee population.
- Chilling effects: Measurable drops in healthcare utilization, school attendance, and access to essential services — affecting US citizens and non-citizens alike.
- Reversal of longstanding protection: The sensitive locations policy had been in place under every administration since 2011 and was widely regarded as a baseline protection for vulnerable populations.
- Collateral harm: "Collateral arrests" — people swept up who were not enforcement targets — became routine as the daily arrest quota tripled.
- Impact on children: Children in immigrant families, many of whom are US citizens, were directly affected through reduced school attendance and healthcare access.
International Law Violations
- ICCPR Article 18: Enforcement at churches violates freedom of religion.
- ICESCR Articles 12 and 13: Chilling effects on healthcare and education access violate economic and social rights.
- Convention on the Rights of the Child Article 28: Children's right to education is undermined.
- UDHR Article 14: Fear of arrest at service locations deters asylum seekers from accessing legal processes.
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
Factsheet: Trump's Rescission of Protected Areas Policies Undermines Safety for All
Trump Administration Rescinds Sensitive Locations Policy: What It Means for Institutions of Higher Education
Rescission of the DHS Protected Areas Policy: Implications for Healthcare Systems
As ICE Arrests Increased, a Higher Portion Had No U.S. Criminal Record
ICE's detainee population reaches new record high of 73,000
New ICE arrest data show the power of state and local governments to curtail mass deportations
Protecting Sensitive Locations Act of 2025
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