If illegal immigration were a backstage pass to the world’s worst party, 2025 might go down in history as the year the bouncer didn’t just kick people out – he rented a megaphone, waved a neon sign that said “Exit This Way,” and installed a one-way gate. According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), 2.5 million people living in the United States without legal authorization have left the country since Donald Trump took office in January, a combination of formal deportations and voluntary self-deportations that DHS described as a “record-breaking year” under the president’s policies.
Illegal Immigration Hits the Brakes in 2025
DHS officials told Fox News Digital exclusively that the total includes more than 605,000 deportations and about 1.9 million voluntary departures since Jan. 20. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin described the administration’s posture in plain language: “Illegal aliens are hearing our message to leave now. They know that if they don’t, we will find them, we will arrest them, and they will never return.”
The administration’s pitch is equal parts enforcement and incentive, like a parking garage that finally started towing but still offers a discount if you leave before the boot goes on. A great incentive was the encouragement to leave the country via the CBP Home mobile app, where illegal immigrants who self-deport receive a complimentary flight plus a $1,000 “exit bonus.”
And apparently it’s been working.
In fiscal year 2024, border and inadmissible encounters were extremely high, even as deportations rose compared with recent years. The House Committee on Homeland Security’s FY 2024 fact sheet said the year ended with “nearly 3 million inadmissible encounters, 10.8 million total encounters since FY2021,” and it cited 271,000 deportations in FY 2024.
DHS and CBP data have reported historically low encounter numbers in recent months, alongside claims of “zero releases” for months at a time. A Colorado Politics report describing DHS figures said October 2025 saw 30,561 “total encounters nationwide,” which it described as “the lowest start to a fiscal year ever recorded by CBP.” It was also 79% lower than October 2024 under the Biden administration and a 29% decrease from the “previous record low” of October 2012, in which there were 43,010 encounters. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said: “History made: the lowest border crossings in October history and the sixth straight month of ZERO releases. This is the most secure border ever.”
CBP recorded more than 1.5 million apprehensions between ports along the Southwest border, with inadmissible encounters at ports of entry nationwide rising sharply compared with FY 2021. “Our mission is simple: secure the border and safeguard this nation,” said CBP Commissioner Rodney Scott. “And that’s exactly what we are doing. No excuses. No politics. Just results delivered by the most dedicated law-enforcement professionals in the country. We’re not easing up — we’re pushing even harder.”
Critics argue that self-deportation numbers are hard to count because people don’t stop at the door to be checked off a list when they leave. That concern is legitimate. Large totals can sometimes work like a shell game, drawing attention to the headline number while questions linger about exactly who is being counted. Even so, when confirmed deportations and detention numbers are rising across multiple independent reports, it suggests enforcement is working.
What About Crime?
Crime statistics have a way of being very abstract until a mugshot flashes on the evening news or a police blotter reads like a horror anthology. For years, the immigration debate has leaned heavily on spreadsheets and slogans, while the criminal cases were treated as inconvenient footnotes. But as enforcement tightens and arrests rise, the stories behind those numbers are getting harder to ignore. These aren’t theoretical risks or partisan talking points – they’re real people, real victims, and crimes that happened only because someone who wasn’t supposed to be here never left.
A few examples include Jashanpreet Singh, a 21-year-old illegal immigrant who was driving a semi-truck in California while reportedly under the influence of drugs. Per reports, he made an illegal U-turn on an interstate that caused a multi-vehicle collision that killed three people. Harjinger Singh, an illegal from India and also a semi-truck driver, allegedly killed a 29-year-old man in Washington state.
Then, of course, there’s Jose Antonio Ibarra, a Venezuelan national who was found guilty of murdering University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley. And Victor Antonio Martinez Hernandez, a Salvadoran who came to the United States and had a warrant that was issued in his home country, was convicted of raping and murdering Rachel Hannah Morin in Maryland.
These cases are not statistics or abstractions. They are lives lost and families permanently changed. And they represent only a small sample of the crimes committed by people who were not here legally, underscoring how even a handful of cases can carry devastating consequences that were entirely preventable.
If the goal is to measure improvement under strict immigration enforcement, 2025 delivers clearer, harder evidence than the years before. What it does not yet provide is a nationwide crime chart with a bold arrow pointing downward and a policy label attached. The administration’s case rests on something more basic: fewer illegal immigrants, more criminal offenders removed, and border control used as prevention rather than cleanup. Whether that approach produces long-term declines in immigration-linked crime will take time and solid data to prove. But compared with 2024, the shift is unmistakable. The bouncer is back, and this time he’s not just standing by the door – he’s clearing the room.






