Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests 10,000 people over a five-day period at the end of June, according to reporting that cites numbers provided by a person familiar with the figures. The arrests are described as a significant surge compared with routine activity, occurring amid an intensified deportation effort associated with the Trump administration’s immigration agenda. One outlet notes that December had the highest ICE arrest totals since the administration began, with an average of about 1,283 arrests per day nationwide, suggesting the end-of-June spike represents a rapid increase in enforcement intensity. Another report, attributed to an AP account, says the arrest figures were obtained from an anonymous source. Across the coverage, the central point is the same: ICE conducts roughly 10,000 arrests in a short, concentrated span at the end of June, indicating a focused push rather than a gradual trend. The sources do not provide additional breakdowns such as locations, demographics, or case outcomes in the material provided.