On day one of Donald Trump’s second time period as president, he issued a wave of government orders to radically broaden the enforcement of immigration regulation. It was step one towards Trump’s promise to hold out mass deportations—the “largest,” he pledged, within the nation’s historical past.
What adopted, all through 2025, was an aggressive marketing campaign that included Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids at workplaces equivalent to farms; the deployment of Nationwide Guard items in cities like Chicago and Los Angeles; and a Supreme Courtroom ruling that cleared the way in which for racial profiling throughout immigration enforcement.
These actions performed out in stark pictures which have come to outline Trump’s immigration agenda: scenes of federal brokers—typically with masks overlaying their faces—tackling folks inside courthouses, or protesters gathering en masse to face off in opposition to Nationwide Guard members.

Getty Photographs photographers captured lots of these scenes. And as they did, they witnessed the chaos of Trump’s immigration enforcement firsthand.
In a single image photographed in a New York Metropolis courthouse, photographer Michael M. Santiago noticed a household exit their immigration listening to when Border Patrol brokers approached the person, asking if he was a particular particular person.

“He mentioned he was not, however the brokers didn’t consider him,” Santiago says in a press release to Quick Firm. “The spouse instantly started advocating for her husband, stepping between him and the brokers and telling them they must take all of them. As brokers tried to detain the person, the daughter and older son started to cry.”
Finally, the agent did confirm that the person was not the particular person they had been searching for.

In one other shot by photographer Ryan Murphy, two Border Patrol brokers wrestle a person to the bottom inside a fast-food restaurant beneath building. Murphy had been following Border Patrol autos once they stopped at that building web site.
“After listening to a commotion inside, I bumped into the constructing to seek out this scene unfolding in entrance of me,” he says. “This time it occurred at a Panda Specific building web site, but it surely may have been the parking zone of a division retailer, a hair salon, or a gasoline station. All locations you and I’d go to on a daily day.”
Photographer Scott Olson photographed residents of Chicago’s Brighton Park neighborhood crowded in opposition to a door, watching as Border Patrol brokers patrolled their road.

“Residents within the neighborhood had been guarded and resentful of the brokers’ presence as a result of a month earlier a violent confrontation occurred close by with them and a girl,” he says.
After that earlier incident, folks poured into the road to confront the brokers, and had been then hit with flash grenades, tear gasoline, and pepper balls. “All fees in opposition to the lady, who was a U.S. citizen, had been later dropped,” Olson provides.

Getty photographers additionally captured the protests in opposition to this enforcement. In Los Angeles, throughout a rally in opposition to the Nationwide Guard’s presence there, a police officer is seen pointing his crowd-control projectile gun seemingly straight on the photographer.
A special form of protest occurred on a hashish farm in Camarillo, California. Throughout an immigration raid, protestors blocked the street and ended up in an “hours-long standoff” with federal brokers within the area, says photographer Mario Tama. Jaime Alanis Garcia, a 56-year-old farmworker, fell roughly 30 feet throughout that raid and died days later.

The Division of Homeland Safety says that it deported greater than 600,000 folks. Many others, although, selected to self-deport—1.9 million, based on DHS—spurred by concern and even, in some instances, as a result of ICE promised them money to take action.
Andrea, a 28-year-old undocumented mom from Ecuador, selected to self-deport along with her 7-year-old daughter after her husband was detained and deported.

“Photographing the immigrant expertise within the U.S. is all the time delicate, however by no means greater than in 2025 in an atmosphere of a lot concern, particularly within the undocumented inhabitants,” says photographer John Moore, who photographed Andrea and her daughter on their flight again to Ecuador.
He first met Andrea by a Connecticut nonprofit that was serving to her after her husband’s deportation. After sharing his earlier work along with her, he says, “she thought it essential to share her household’s story in order that Individuals may higher perceive what she and hundreds of thousands of others are going by.”

