QUICK ANSWER
Yes. Catholic bishops publicly urged the Trump administration to pause ICE apprehensions and roundups during Christmas, warning that holiday enforcement, including Christmas ICE enforcement, can sweep up non-criminal immigrants and intensify family separation fears. The White House refused, and multiple outlets report that enforcement will continue as usual through the holiday window, raising risk for undocumented immigrants and mixed-status families.
FAST FACTS
- Who is affected: Undocumented immigrants, visa overstays, asylum seekers, mixed-status families, people with old removal orders
- Risk level: High (holiday week + reduced access to counsel/courts)
- Timeline urgency: Immediate (Christmas week through New Year)
- Attorney needed immediately: Yes, especially if prior ICE contact or any pending USCIS/court appointment
WHAT HAPPENED
In the days before Christmas, Florida Catholic bishops asked President Trump (and Florida’s governor) to pause immigration enforcement over the Christmas holidays.
Multiple media outlets reported both the appeal and the refusal:
- White House says no to Catholic bishops’ call for Christmas pause in immigration enforcement
- Florida bishops urge pause on ICE raids for Christmas
- Florida bishops call for immigration-enforcement moratorium over Christmas
- ‘Let people celebrate in peace’: Florida bishops ask for Christmas pause in immigration enforcement
- White House rebuffs Catholic bishops’ appeal for a Christmas pause in immigration enforcement
- Catholic bishops ask Trump, DeSantis to pause immigration enforcement during Christmas holidays
Here is the primary-source text of the bishops’ appeal:
- FL bishops send appeal to President Trump and Gov. DeSantis to pause immigration enforcement during Christmas holidays
- Florida bishops’ appeal to pause immigration enforcement
WHAT THE BISHOPS ASKED FOR (AND WHAT THEY DID NOT)
This was not a demand for amnesty or a permanent policy change. It was a time-limited request framed around humanitarian harm during Christmas.
They argued enforcement has increasingly swept in people who are not violent criminals, and they warned holiday operations create a “climate of fear” that spreads beyond undocumented immigrants to lawful family members and neighbors.
THE WHITE HOUSE RESPONSE: “BUSINESS AS USUAL”
The administration rejected a holiday pause and emphasized continued enforcement—an approach consistent with the broader policy direction HLG has been tracking toward 2026.
For HLG’s data-driven projection and policy synthesis on what’s coming next year, link:
For the funding and structural accelerants behind enforcement expansion, link:
WHY CHRISTMAS-WEEK ENFORCEMENT HITS HARDER THAN A NORMAL WEEK
Holiday enforcement is uniquely damaging because it collides with:
- reduced access to counsel
- court closures and delays for bond filings
- travel-related exposure (airports, highways, family visits)
- heightened vulnerability for children and caregivers
HLG has documented the wider human consequences, including how raids and enforcement stress can affect children (including U.S.-born kids):
- ICE raids and school performance: stress impacts even U.S.-born kids
- Mental health crisis for children and adults due to ICE raids (2025 update)
CONSEQUENCES IF YOU DO NOTHING (MANDATORY)
Worst-case scenario
- Arrest during holiday travel or a family gathering
- Rapid transfer into ICE custody
- Delayed bond strategy due to closures and limited legal access
- Family separation during Christmas week and cascading loss of income/housing stability
Best-case scenario
- You get a rapid risk assessment and avoid unnecessary exposure
- Counsel is retained early and bond/relief documentation is prepared before deadlines
- Family preparedness plan prevents preventable harm
Timeline of escalation
- Hours: custody intake, transfer risk, property/phone access issues
- Days: custody classification, bond planning, first hearing scheduling
- Weeks: removal case accelerates; missed deadlines become permanent damage
For context on detention pressure and scale, HLG has tracked detention surges and system-wide impacts:
- New record: ICE detainee population reaches historic highs (2025)
- Recent ICE arrest/detention/removal figures and cost impacts
WHAT TO DO NEXT (STEP-BY-STEP)
Step 1: First 24–72 hours: reduce exposure and build your “readiness file”
- Gather all immigration records (A-number, old notices, prior orders, filings)
- Identify “tripwires” (old removal orders, missed hearings, overstays, arrests—even minor)
- Avoid unnecessary travel and avoid showing up alone to high-risk appointments
- Assign an emergency contact and childcare plan
- Speak with counsel before any appointment
HLG readiness resources:
- How to prepare for an ICE arrest in Columbus, Ohio
- What to do if ICE comes to your door: 10 smart things
Step 2: Next 30 days: prepare bond and relief options
- Build equities (family ties, work history, medical records, community evidence)
- Pre-plan bond packet components
- Map relief options (asylum, cancellation, adjustment, motions to reopen where applicable)
Step 3: Long-term: treat enforcement as sustained
- Stay consistent across all filings and public-facing records
- Avoid “status drift” and document gaps
- Plan around USCIS, court, and ICE touchpoints
RED FLAGS AND COMMON MISTAKES
- Assuming ICE pauses for holidays
- Traveling without a risk screen if you have an overstay or old order
- Going to USCIS appointments without counsel when you have known risk factors
- Treating USCIS buildings as “safe zones”
- Posting enforcement-sensitive content publicly while in a pending posture
- Carrying unnecessary identity documents that increase exposure
- Missing notices or deadlines during holiday disruptions
- Signing anything in custody without legal advice
HLG’s USCIS interview-arrest coverage (high-citation potential for journalists):
- ICE arrests at marriage green card interviews (2025 guide)
- USCIS interview arrest “leaked memo”: 5 shocking facts
- Should I go to my USCIS interview? Overstay concerns and arrest risk
- Are overstays being arrested at USCIS marriage interviews? (2026)
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR COLUMBUS, CLEVELAND, CINCINNATI, DAYTON
Even when a Christmas enforcement story originates in Florida, the practical risk is national—especially in places already seeing heightened activity.
HLG’s Ohio enforcement reporting and community response:
- Operation Buckeye in Columbus: ICE arrests, immigrant demographics, and why this city was targeted
- Columbus ICE protests: residents mobilize in response to enforcement surge
- Immigrant assistance nonprofits in Columbus, Ohio
FAQ ON ICE ENFORCEMENT DURING CHRISTMAS SEASON
1. Did the White House refuse the bishops’ request for a Christmas ICE pause?
Yes. Multiple outlets reported the request and the refusal, including major wire coverage and regional TV reporting.
2. Can ICE arrest people on Christmas Day?
Yes. There is no legal “holiday exception” in immigration enforcement authority.
3. Does a bishop’s request legally bind ICE or DHS?
No. It is a moral/political appeal, not a legal directive.
4. Does being a “non-criminal” prevent arrest?
No. ICE can arrest people without criminal convictions; priorities and practice vary.
5. Can parents of U.S. citizen children be arrested during Christmas week?
Yes.
6. If I have a pending case (I-130, I-485, asylum), am I safe?
Not necessarily. Pending filings do not guarantee protection from arrest.
7. Are USCIS offices safe places during an enforcement surge?
No. Arrests have been documented in or around USCIS appointment contexts.
8. If I skip my USCIS interview because I’m afraid, what happens?
USCIS may treat the case as abandoned or deny it—get legal advice first.
9. Can ICE arrest someone after a marriage-based green card interview?
Yes—HLG has tracked multiple documented patterns and reporting.
10. Is holiday enforcement risk higher because courts are closed?
Often yes, because access to bond planning and hearings can be delayed.
11. Does traveling inside the U.S. increase risk?
It can, especially for people with unresolved status issues or old orders.
12. Can ICE arrest people at churches?
Policies can change; enforcement can occur under certain circumstances. Do not rely on assumptions.
13. What is the single most important step before Christmas travel?
A risk screen with counsel if you have any immigration vulnerability.
14. What documents should my family gather before a surge week?
A-number, court documents, prior notices, filings, ID, emergency contacts, medical records.
15. What should I do if ICE comes to my home?
Do not open the door unless required; request a warrant and contact counsel.
16. If a loved one is detained, what’s the first priority?
Confirm custody location and stop unverified rumor circulation; begin legal triage.
17. Can ICE transfer someone out of state quickly?
Yes, transfers can occur rapidly.
18. What increases bond chances?
Strong equities, stable residence, community ties, and organized documentation—case-specific.
19. Are lawful immigrants affected by “sweep” operations?
Some operations and errors can impact people with lawful status—verify documents and get advice.
20. Can social media posts create risk?
They can contribute to scrutiny depending on context; assume vetting is ongoing.
21. Are there 2026 signs this gets worse, not better?
HLG’s reporting indicates expansion trends and operational capacity increases.
22. Is there a “safe week” to handle immigration issues?
Do not assume that. Enforcement can be continuous.
23. If I have an old removal order, does Christmas week increase urgency?
Yes—old orders are a common “tripwire” for custody actions.
24. Can I be arrested even if my marriage is real?
Yes. Real marriages do not immunize someone from arrest if they are removable.
25. Should I carry my passport everywhere during the holidays?
Not always—carrying unnecessary documents can increase exposure. Get individualized advice.
HERMAN LEGAL GROUP
If you or a loved one may be affected by holiday-period enforcement, speaking with an experienced immigration attorney promptly can help you understand risks, avoid preventable exposure, and prepare bond and relief options. You can schedule a confidential consult here: Book a consultation.
RESOURCE DIRECTORY: Christmas Travel & ICE Enforcement
GOVERNMENT & POLICY AUTHORITIES
- Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Enforcement Overview — enforcement priorities and authorities
https://www.dhs.gov/topic/immigration-enforcement - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) — enforcement, detention, and removal policy
https://www.ice.gov/about-enforcement-and-removal-operations - U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) — case processing and interview policies
https://www.uscis.gov/about-us/mission-and-history - Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) — immigration court hearings
https://www.justice.gov/eoir - Federal Register — regulatory notices affecting immigration enforcement
https://www.federalregister.gov/search?conditions%5Bagencies%5D%5B%5D=executive-office-for-immigration-review
MEDIA REPORTS ON CHRISTMAS ENFORCEMENT & BISHOPS’ APPEAL
- Fox News — White House says no to Catholic bishops’ call for Christmas pause in immigration enforcement
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/white-house-says-no-catholic-bishops-call-christmas-pause-immigration-enforcement - WBAL / Hearst Television — Catholic Church urges pause on immigration enforcement over Christmas
https://www.wbaltv.com/article/catholic-church-us-immigration-enforcement-appeal/69842790 - National Catholic Register — Florida bishops’ pre-Christmas letter on immigration enforcement
https://www.ncregister.com/cna/florida-bishops-issue-pre-christmas-letter-on-immigration-enforcement - Fox 13 Tampa Bay — “Let people celebrate peace”: Christmas pause request
https://www.fox13news.com/news/let-people-celebrate-peace-florida-bishops-ask-christmas-pause-immigration-enforcement - AP News — White House rebuffs bishops’ appeal for a Christmas pause in immigration enforcement
https://apnews.com/article/42340dd5b3aabf8cda31e23d62b8863e - WPBF Palm Beach — Florida Catholic bishops ask to pause immigration enforcement over the holidays
https://www.wpbf.com/article/florida-catholic-bishops-ask-trump-desantis-pause-immigration-enforcement-christmas-holidays/69840351
EMERGENCY LEGAL RIGHTS & GUIDES
Know-Your-Rights Materials
- ACLU — Immigration Detention & Rights Handbook (PDF)
https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights/immigration-detention-and-rights-handbook - National Immigration Law Center — What to Do in an Immigration Raid
https://www.nilc.org/issues/immigration-enforcement-and-border-security/immigration-raids/ - National Immigration Project — ICE Enforcement: Law & Practice
https://www.nationalimmigrationproject.org/legalresources/practice_advisories.html
Travel & Border Rights
- ACLU — Traveling Within the U.S. & Immigration Enforcement Risks
https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights/immigrants-rights-traveling-within-us - American Immigration Council — Rights at the Border & Checkpoints
https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/rights-border-checkpoints
IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT DATA & ANALYSIS
- TRAC Immigration (Syracuse University) — ICE enforcement and removal data
https://trac.syr.edu/immigration/reports/ - MPI (Migration Policy Institute) — Interior enforcement trends and impact analysis
https://www.migrationpolicy.org/topics/us-immigration-policy-and-law/interior-enforcement - Pew Research Center — U.S. Immigration Trends
_https://www.pewresearch.org/topics/immigration/
HLG INTERNAL RESOURCES (ENFORCEMENT & HOLIDAY RELEVANCE)
Enforcement Trends & Projections
- Trump Will Expand Immigration Enforcement in 2026 (Policy & Projections)
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/trump-will-expand-immigration-enforcement-in-2026/ - Will Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” Turbocharge Immigration Enforcement and ICE?
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/trumps-big-beautiful-bill-will-turbocharge-immigration-enforcement-and-ice/ - New ICE Detainee Population Record (2025)
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/ice-detainee-population-record-2025/ - Recent ICE Arrest/Detention/Removal Figures & Impact
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/recent-statistic-ice-arrest-detention-removal-costs-impact-what-are-the-figures/
Rights & Preparation
- How to Prepare for an ICE Arrest in Columbus, Ohio
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/how-to-prepare-for-ice-arrest-in-columbus-ohio/ - What to Do If ICE Comes to Your Door: 10 Smart Things
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/what-to-do-if-ice-comes-to-your-door-10-smart-things/ - ICE Arrests at USCIS Interviews (2025 Guide)
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/ice-arrests-marriage-green-card-interviews-2025/ - USCIS Interview Arrest “Leaked Memo”: 5 Shocking Facts
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/uscis-interview-arrest-leaked-memo/ - Should I Go to My USCIS Interview? Overstay Concerns & Arrest Risk
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/should-i-go-to-my-uscis-interview/ - Are Overstays Being Arrested at USCIS Marriage Interviews? (2026)
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/uscis-marriage-interview-overstay-arrest-2026/
Community & Local Resources
- Operation Buckeye in Columbus: ICE Arrests & Immigrant Demographics
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/operation-buckeye-in-columbus-ice-arrests-immigrant-demographics-somali-communities-and-why-this-city-was-targeted/ - Columbus ICE Protests
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/columbus-ice-protests/ - Immigrant Assistance Nonprofits in Columbus, Ohio
_https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/immigration-nonprofits-columbus-oh/
RIGHTS DURING HOLIDAY TRAVEL & ENFORCEMENT EVENTS
Know Your Rights If ICE Approaches:
- You have the right to remain silent about your immigration status.
- You do not have to open the door without a warrant.
- Request to see a valid judicial warrant before admitting enforcement agents.
- Do not sign any documents without consulting counsel.
- Ask immediately to speak with an attorney before answering questions.
For a free printable rights card (English/Spanish), see:
- ACLU Immigration Rights Pocket Card
https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights/immigrants-rights/immigrant-rights-pocket-card
COMMUNITY SUPPORT & LEGAL AID
National Organizations
- RAICES (Texas & national legal aid provider)
https://www.raicestexas.org/get-help/ - National Immigration Law Center (NILC)
_https://www.nilc.org/get-involved/support-our-work/ - American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) — attorney finder
_https://www.aila.org/advocates/find-a-lawyer
Ohio-Based Support
- Community Refugee & Immigration Services (Cleveland)
_https://www.crisohio.org/services/immigration/ - ICL-Alliance (Central Ohio legal aid)
_https://www.iclaw.org/legal-help-cincy/ - Catholic Charities Immigration Services (Dayton)
_https://www.ccdoy.org/our-services/immigration/
EMERGENCY HOTLINES & RAPID RESPONSE
- RAICES Rapid Response Hotline
Call or text (available on official website) - National Immigration Project Rapid Response Network (for detained individuals)
https://www.nationalimmigrationproject.org/legalresources/rapid_response.html
HOW TO USE THIS DIRECTORY
For Journalists:
- Cite DHS, ICE, and USCIS official pages for policy context.
- Use media links to verify live reporting on enforcement and appeals.
- Link back to HLG enforcement projections and rights guides.
For Researchers & Policy Analysts:
- Use TRAC and MPI data sources for quantification.
- Reference Federal Register enforcement notices.
- Combine with legal rights materials for comprehensive briefs.
For Community Members & Advocates:
- Share the Know-Your-Rights links widely.
- Use HLG local guides to prepare Ohio families.
- Print and distribute legal rights cards before holiday travel.
If you’d like, I can next build a printable PDF resource card based on this directory that can be shared with community groups, advocacy organizations, and churches — optimized for distribution on Reddit, WhatsApp, and Telegram.



