UMVA has learned that the White House has unveiled a provocative new portal that maps every migrant arrest across the United States, branding those detained as “aliens.”
Visitors to the site are greeted by a stark green banner proclaiming, “They walk among us,” followed by a chilling narrative that claims a six‑decade‑long secret: undocumented individuals have been living in American neighborhoods, shopping, attending schools, and blending into daily life—yet, according to the page, they “do not belong here.”
The map flashes red dots across the nation, with Texas and Florida glowing brightest. In New York alone, the tally shows 3,650 arrests since early 2025, involving nationals from Belarus, the Philippines, Spain and dozens of other countries. Laredo, Texas, near the border, tops the list with 5,921 detentions, predominantly South Americans accused of offenses ranging from commercial sexual crimes to traffic violations.
A live ticker on the site counts “encounters” that have now surged past three million, while a sidebar warns readers not to be alarmed by “alien abductions,” insisting that anyone taken into custody is “in good hands.”
Among the flagged individuals are British citizens apprehended in Miami, Jacksonville and San Diego, underscoring the portal’s global reach. The language used reduces people to “it,” promising to “return it safely to its place of origin,” a phrasing that echoes some of history’s darkest dehumanizations.
In a parallel move, the administration announced lawsuits against four states—Maine, Massachusetts, Oregon and Washington—for refusing to provide confidential license plates to ICE agents, alleging that state policies endanger immigration officers.
State leaders push back, arguing that such measures sidestep transparency and accountability, refusing to aid an agency they deem to be operating in secrecy.
