Posted by Alumni from The Atlantic
May 5, 2026
In mid-January, while Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and agents were battling protesters on the icy streets of Minneapolis, ICE Deputy Director Madison Sheahan abruptly quit. This was a week after an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Good; another protester, Alex Pretti, was slain nine days later. Sheahan, then 28, had been on the job for less than a year, but she did not resign in protest. She left to run for Congress in Ohio. Sheahan's campaign quickly raised hundreds of thousands of dollars, and released ads that leaned hard into her lead role in President Trump's mass-deportation campaign. Sheahan came to ICE with no background in immigration, but she was close to Kristi Noem, Trump's first Homeland Security secretary this term. Some veteran officials did not take kindly to being ordered around by an inexperienced 20-something who had previously worked at the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (some jokingly referred to her as 'fish cop'). Noem's... learn more