ICE Agents Deployed to 14 Major Airports Amid Rising TSA Absences
By Reuters | 23 Mar, 2026
ICE agents and Homeland Security Investigators are helping ease security lines at Atlanta, JFK, Laguardia, Newark and others as some passengers continued to experience hours-long screening delays.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents stand with other Law enforcement at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York City, U.S. March 23, 2026. Hundreds of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were ordered to deploy to airports to help fill TSA staffing gaps across the country. REUTERS/Adam Gray
U.S. immigration agents began deploying at more than a dozen U.S. airports on Monday to aid security screening as staffing absences by unpaid airport security officers have caused massive delays.
The Homeland Security Department confirmed it had begun deploying hundreds of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to assist in airport security at airports facing significant staffing issues.
ICE and Homeland Security Investigations officers were being deployed to around 14 airports including Atlanta, JFK in New York, New York LaGuardia, Newark, New Orleans, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Newark, Phoenix, and Fort Myers, according to officials and social media posts.
Separately, Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson - the busiest U.S. airport - told passengers to arrive at least four hours early on Monday for flights.
Social media posts showed ICE agents standing near Transportation Security Administration officers who were checking IDs.
For now, ICE personnel will not be deployed in areas behind airport security checkpoints because they lack the specific clearance needed, sources told Reuters.
On Saturday, absences among the approximately 50,000 TSA security staff reached 11.5%, their highest since a partial government shutdown began five weeks ago.
At airports in Houston, New York and Atlanta, more than one-third of TSA staff were calling in sick or otherwise absent, DHS said, as the shutdown left tens of thousands working without pay while congressional Democrats and Republicans argue over the DHS budget.
Atlanta Mayor Andrew Dickens said federal officials had indicated that the ICE deployment would support TSA in crowd control and managing security lines in domestic terminals, and is "not intended to conduct immigration enforcement activities".
Announcing ICE deployment at airports on Saturday, President Donald Trump said agents' activities would include "the immediate arrest of all Illegal Immigrants who have come into our Country".
Democrats have held up funding for DHS while demanding a change in rules governing its immigration operations, after ICE agents shot and killed U.S. citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti, sparking public outrage.
More than 400 TSA agents have resigned since the start of the latest partial government shutdown on Feb. 14.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Ted Hesson; Editing by Toby Chopra and Andrei Khalip)
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