The Coast Guard started flying migrants to states along the border on Saturday. The Air Force is assigned to fly them out of the country.
Three Mexican fishermen were caught with 200 pounds of illegally-harvested red snapper in federal waters off southern Texas
The deployment was ordered after the Trump administration signaled its intent to rename the Gulf of Mexico and moved quickly to fire the Coast Guard commandant.
U.S. Coast Guard detained three fishermen for illegally catching 200 pounds of red snapper off Texas; seized fish to aid research and turtle rehabilitation.
The U.S. Coast Guard started using the term “Gulf of America” to refer to the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, one day after President Trump signed an executive order setting in motion the process to
In support of President Trump's executive orders, the Coast Guard will send additional resources to maritime borders, the military branch said Tuesday.
It comes after the Trump administration fired Coast Guard commandant Adm. Linda Fagan, the armed forces' first female service chief who had served since 2022.
The US Coast Guard is taking President Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant mandate seriously, announcing this week it will step up patrols in migrant-prone crossings.
The U.S. Coast Guard says it is deploying assets around maritime borders in support of President Donald Trump’s executive orders.
The bulk of deployed troops come from the Army, primarily military police, to enhance surveillance efforts and act as a deterrent to illegal crossings along the border with Mexico.
Hundreds of fish illegally caught in federal waters off the coast of South Texas will not be returned to the sea. On Tuesday, the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) intercepted a lancha—a small and fast motorboat—with three Mexican fishermen illegally fishing north of the Maritime Boundary Line,