
HOLLAND — The White House has released a new online database detailing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests across the country, including data showing that 28 individuals were arrested in the Holland area between January 27, 2025, and May 13, 2026.
According to data published by the White House through its "Aliens" database, the arrests involved individuals from eight countries: Guatemala, Honduras, India, Laos, Mexico, Nicaragua, South Korea, and Vietnam.
The database identifies criminal charges associated with those arrested as including assault, obstructing police, sexual assault, sex offenses, traffic offenses, and weapons offenses. The White House data also indicates gang affiliation among at least some of the individuals arrested in the Holland area.
The arrests occurred over a roughly 16-month period as the Trump Administration expanded immigration enforcement efforts nationwide and increased the number of ICE operations throughout Michigan and other states. Federal officials have repeatedly stated that enforcement efforts prioritize individuals accused or convicted of criminal offenses.
The Holland figures are part of a broader national effort by the Administration to publicly highlight immigration enforcement actions and provide geographic data on arrests occurring in communities across the United States.
According to the White House database, Holland recorded:

The release provides only summary information and does not identify individual arrestees, specific neighborhoods, conviction status, or the disposition of each case. Federal immigration data frequently includes both individuals with criminal convictions and those facing pending criminal charges.
The publication of local arrest figures comes amid heightened debate over immigration enforcement policies nationally. Supporters argue that increased ICE operations improve public safety by removing individuals accused or convicted of serious crimes, while critics have called for greater transparency regarding arrest criteria, due process protections, and the proportion of those arrested who have not been convicted of violent offenses.
Holland's total of 28 arrests represents one of many communities nationwide included in the White House's newly released database, which is intended to provide the public with greater visibility into immigration enforcement activity occurring at the local level.
The complete data can be viewed through the White House's online immigration enforcement database on the Administration's website.