DHS adds 5,000 profiles to public database tracking criminal illegal aliens

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Kristi Noem Secretary of Department of Homeland Security | Department of Homeland Security

DHS adds 5,000 profiles to public database tracking criminal illegal aliens

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The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has expanded its online database, WOW.DHS.GOV, by adding information on 5,000 more individuals identified as criminal illegal aliens. This brings the total number of profiles available to 25,000. The website aims to provide public access to data about people arrested under the Trump administration for various crimes.

A new feature has also been introduced to allow users to search for individuals removed from their specific state through a dedicated URL format: wow.dhs.gov/[state name].

Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin commented on the update: “While the mainstream media is engaged in a media blackout, refusing to cover the criminals our law enforcement risk their lives to remove from America’s streets, the Trump administration is offering ultimate transparency. The numbers speak for themselves: since launching WOW.DHS.GOV, MILLIONS of Americans have logged on to the Worst of the Worst website to see the gang members, child predators, murderers, human traffickers, and other vicious criminals DHS is removing every day from every corner of America,” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin. “Just today, DHS added 5,000 more criminal illegal aliens convicted of repulsive crimes including sex offense against a child, homicide and human slavery. These monsters represent only a small fraction of the hundreds of thousands of criminal illegal aliens DHS has arrested since the start of the Trump administration – and we are NOT slowing down. Stay tuned.”

Since its launch on December 8, 2025, WOW.DHS.GOV has received millions of views and was among the most visited pages on DHS.gov in 2025 despite being available for less than a month.

The latest additions include individuals from countries such as Honduras, Mexico, Laos, Vietnam, Guatemala, Cuba, Cambodia, El Salvador, and Somalia. Their offenses range from sexual assault and homicide to kidnapping and human trafficking.

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