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Dozens Arrested After Anti-ICE Protest at a Manhattan Hilton
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By The New York Times
Published 1 hour ago on
January 28, 2026

Protesters condemning Immigration and Customs Enforcement gather in the lobby of a Hilton Garden Inn in New York, on Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2026. The protesters directed their ire at Hilton for, they claimed, providing lodging to ICE agents. (Ashley Gilbertson/The New York Times)

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NEW YORK — Dozens of demonstrators were arrested in Manhattan on Tuesday evening after occupying the lobby of a Tribeca hotel where, they said, federal immigration agents were staying while carrying out the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

More than 100 people crammed into the hotel, a Hilton Garden Inn on Sixth Avenue near Canal Street, at about 6 p.m., condemning the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency with chants and anti-ICE slogans on their black T-shirts.

The protesters also directed their ire at Hilton for, they claimed, providing lodging to ICE agents. A hotel worker checking in guests, and guests themselves, seemed confused by the protest. It could not immediately be determined whether ICE agents were staying at the hotel.

The Manhattan protest followed a similar action Sunday in Minneapolis, where the killings by federal agents of Renee Good and Alex Pretti this month have further inflamed residents angry about the crackdown and the methods employed to enforce it.

The Minneapolis protest, which began as a peaceful, if noisy, demonstration outside a Home2Suites by Hilton hotel, grew heated after some people in the crowd began to vandalize the building and federal agents used tear gas.

Tricia McLaughlin, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson, declined to respond to a request for comment about protesters’ targeting of hotels where they believe ICE agents are staying. Hilton did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Mamdani Sends Praise to Protesters

Mayor Zohran Mamdani, through a spokesperson, praised the protesters for exercising their rights and the police for their response, and he said he was glad the demonstration had ended peacefully.

The spokesperson, Sam Raskin, said in a statement that Mamdani believes “ICE is a rogue agency that has repeatedly carried out cruel, inhumane and lawless raids and arrests of American citizens.”

Just after 6:35 p.m. Tuesday, police officers entered the Hilton lobby and warned that those who did not leave faced arrest. “They want you guys out of the hotel,” one officer said. Many people soon left, and police forced reporters out as well. About 50 people remained.

Rev. Micah Bucey, the senior minister at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village, was among those who stayed put. He said he was unfazed by the prospect of being arrested.

“I know that my God is telling me that I have to be here,” he said. “I am in solidarity with all of the people in Minneapolis. All of the people in Chicago, all of the people across the country, especially with my immigrant neighbors.”

Some of the protesters who left the lobby lingered in the cold outside, where they were joined by others who had walked over from a separate anti-ICE rally outside a federal building in Foley Square.

At about 7:30 p.m., officers with the Police Department’s Strategic Response Group began to make arrests, lifting protesters off the lobby floor, binding their hands with zip ties and escorting them through a back door to a waiting bus.

Police said that 66 people had been taken into custody. Sixty-four were issued summonses for trespassing and disorderly conduct; two received desk appearance tickets for obstructing governmental administration.

By 8 p.m., the lobby had been cleared, and some stray protesters outside the hotel continued to chant “Stop helping ICE” against the steady beat of a drum and the sound of bagpipes. Others had walked up Sixth Avenue to Washington Square Park, where the crowd dispersed.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Ed Shanahan and Olivia Bensimon/Ashley Gilbertson
c. 2026 The New York Times Company

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