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⚡ Breaking — April 16, 2026
Immigration

ICE Director Todd Lyons Resigns Amid Deportation Fallout — Cites Private Sector Move After Months of Scrutiny

Acting ICE chief Todd Lyons submitted his resignation Thursday and will leave May 31. His exit follows two fatal shootings of U.S. citizens by federal agents, a court order to testify before a federal judge, and reports he was hospitalized twice for stress.

The head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is stepping down.

Todd Lyons, the acting director of ICE since March 2025, submitted his resignation on Thursday, April 16. He will remain in the role until May 31 to help with the transition, according to a statement from Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin. Lyons told DHS in his letter that he is leaving to take a job in the private sector.

His exit comes at one of the most turbulent moments in ICE's history. The agency has faced mounting legal, political, and public pressure over its role in the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign — including the fatal shootings of two American citizens by federal agents in Minneapolis earlier this year.

Key Facts at a Glance

  • Who: Todd Lyons, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
  • What: Submitted resignation on April 16, 2026; leaving for the private sector
  • When: Last day is May 31, 2026 — he will stay on during the transition
  • Why he was under pressure: ICE shootings of U.S. citizens, court orders, two reported hospitalizations for stress
  • Who replaces him: No interim or permanent replacement announced yet

Who Is Todd Lyons?

Todd Lyons is a career immigration enforcement officer with nearly two decades at the agency. He joined ICE in 2007 as an agent in Dallas, rose through the Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) division, and eventually became the field office director in Boston, overseeing ERO activities across six New England states.

Before his law enforcement career, Lyons served in the U.S. Air Force starting in 1993 and was recalled to active duty after September 11, 2001. He served as an antiterrorism liaison for Special Operations Command Central overseas.

When Donald Trump won the 2024 election, Lyons was considered a top candidate for ICE director, but the role initially went to Caleb Vitello. Vitello was reassigned within weeks, and on March 9, 2025, Lyons stepped into the acting director role.

Earlier in his tenure as acting director, Lyons drew attention for comments at the Border Security Expo in April 2025. He said he wanted to transform immigration enforcement into something that runs "like a business" — comparing mass deportation to the way "Amazon" delivers packages. The remark drew heavy criticism from immigrant rights groups.

The Pressure That Built Up

Lyons ran ICE during one of the most aggressive enforcement periods in the agency's history. Under President Trump's second term, ICE has significantly expanded its budget, its manpower, and its operational tempo. Lyons oversaw all of it.

But the expansion came with consequences. Over the past four months, a series of high-profile incidents have put ICE in the middle of lawsuits, congressional hearings, and a national debate over the limits of federal immigration enforcement.

Key Pressure Points Leading to Lyons' Resignation
EventDateImpact
Fatal shooting of Renee Good January 7, 2026 ICE agent fatally shot the 37-year-old mother in Minneapolis, triggering weeks of protests
Fatal shooting of Alex Pretti January 24, 2026 CBP officers shot and killed the ICU nurse and VA employee, sparking national outrage
Reports of Lyons' hospitalizations March 2026 (reported) Politico reported Lyons had been hospitalized at least twice for stress-related issues
Minnesota & Hennepin County lawsuit Late March 2026 State accused the Trump administration of withholding evidence in the ICE shootings
Federal judge orders Lyons to testify Spring 2026 Ordered to appear over concerns ICE failed to comply with directives on detainee rights
House Appropriations hearing April 16, 2026 (morning) Faced pointed questioning on ICE's budget, operations, and court compliance
Resignation submitted April 16, 2026 (evening) Lyons informed DHS of his decision hours after the House hearing

The Minneapolis Shootings

Two killings in Minneapolis put ICE under a microscope. Both victims were U.S. citizens. Neither had a criminal record at the time they were shot.

Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother, was shot through the windshield of her car on January 7 by an ICE agent named Jonathan Ross. Her car remains in an FBI warehouse — shrink-wrapped and, according to state officials, never examined. The federal government has refused to cooperate with Minnesota state investigators on the case.

Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse at the Minneapolis VA hospital, was shot and killed by CBP officers on January 24 during protests over Good's death. Pretti had a valid gun permit, no criminal record, and was filming the federal agents when he was pepper-sprayed, tackled by roughly six officers, and then shot. Bystander video reviewed by multiple news organizations appears to show an agent removing Pretti's gun from his holster before he was killed.

Both shootings happened during "Operation Metro Surge," a major ICE deployment to the Twin Cities area that Lyons helped oversee. More than 3,000 arrests were made during the surge, drawing criticism for warrantless arrests, aggressive tactics against protestors, and the detention of U.S. citizens.

The Hospitalization Reports

In March 2026, Politico reported that Lyons had been hospitalized at least twice during the prior seven months for stress-related health issues. The reporting cited two current and two former administration officials.

The operational tempo at ICE during Lyons' tenure was described by colleagues as punishing. Agents were deployed in nonstop surges across major cities. Leadership shakeups happened constantly. Lyons himself replaced a director who had been reassigned. Field office directors in Portland, Denver, and Los Angeles were removed. The DHS secretary was replaced mid-crisis when Kristi Noem was swapped out for Markwayne Mullin.

While Lyons' letter to DHS cited a move to the private sector as his reason for leaving, the hospitalization reports have led to widespread speculation about whether health concerns played a larger role than officials are publicly acknowledging.

The Court Problem

Just weeks before his resignation, a federal judge ordered Lyons to personally appear in court over concerns that ICE was not complying with judicial directives on detainees' rights. That kind of order — requiring a sitting agency director to testify — is highly unusual and signals serious concern from the bench.

On the morning of the day he resigned, Lyons also testified before a House Appropriations subcommittee. Lawmakers questioned him on ICE's budget, its enforcement priorities, and whether it was following court orders. Lyons defended the agency's recent surge, arguing the resources were necessary. But he acknowledged the legal challenges were real.

By that evening, his resignation letter was in Mullin's hands.

How Trump Officials Reacted

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin released a statement praising Lyons shortly after the news broke.

"Director Lyons has been a great leader of ICE and key player in helping the Trump administration remove murderers, rapists, pedophiles, terrorists, and gang members from American communities. He jumpstarted an agency that had not been allowed to do its job for four years. Thanks to his leadership, American communities are safer." — Markwayne Mullin, DHS Secretary

White House border czar Tom Homan said Lyons "served selflessly" and praised his "distinguished law enforcement career." White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller called him a "phenomenal patriot and dedicated leader." White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson described Lyons on X as "an American patriot who made our country safer."

None of the official statements mentioned the Minneapolis shootings, the court order, or the reported hospitalizations.

Timeline of the Lyons Era

2007
Lyons joins ICE as an agent in Dallas, starting his career with the agency.
October 2024
Lyons promoted to acting assistant director of field operations for ICE.
March 9, 2025
Lyons named acting director of ICE after Caleb Vitello is reassigned.
April 2025
At Border Security Expo, Lyons says he wants to run ICE "like a business," comparing deportations to Amazon deliveries.
December 2025
ICE launches "Operation Metro Surge" in Minneapolis–St. Paul, eventually making 3,000+ arrests.
January 7, 2026
ICE agent fatally shoots Renee Good in Minneapolis, sparking weeks of protests.
January 24, 2026
CBP officers fatally shoot Alex Pretti during protests. Second U.S. citizen killed by federal agents in Minneapolis in one month.
March 2026
Politico reports Lyons hospitalized at least twice for stress. Minnesota sues federal government over withheld evidence.
April 16, 2026 — Morning
Lyons testifies before House Appropriations subcommittee on ICE operations and budget.
April 16, 2026 — Evening
Lyons submits resignation to DHS. Effective date: May 31, 2026.

What Happens Next at ICE

No replacement has been announced. ICE has cycled through multiple acting directors since Trump's second term began in January 2025 and has not had a Senate-confirmed director during that period. Stability at the top has been rare.

The agency Lyons leaves behind is simultaneously more powerful and more embattled than at any point in its recent history. Its budget is larger. Its operational footprint is bigger. But it faces lawsuits from at least one state, a federal judge ordering compliance reviews, congressional oversight that's growing louder, and two families still demanding answers about why their loved ones were shot by federal agents.

Real Talk

Straight Answers to What You're Actually Wondering

The questions most people have but the official statements don't touch.

Is ICE going to stop deporting people now?
No. The agency keeps running. A director leaving does not pause operations. Deportation raids, detentions, and enforcement surges continue under the current leadership team. The next director is almost certain to keep executing the same mass deportation agenda that President Trump campaigned on.
Did Lyons get fired or did he really just quit?
Officially, he resigned. The administration's public statements all praise him. But the timing tells a different story — he submitted the resignation the same evening he testified before Congress, while a federal judge was ordering him to answer for ICE's actions, and months after reports that he was hospitalized twice for stress. Whether this was a push or a jump, we may never know. The end result looks the same.
What does "acting" director even mean?
It means he was never confirmed by the Senate. A Senate-confirmed director goes through hearings where lawmakers from both parties can question them before they take the job. An "acting" director skips that step. They run the agency under temporary authority. ICE has not had a Senate-confirmed director for years. That matters because it reduces one of the main checks Congress has on who runs powerful federal agencies.
Who's next? And will they be any different?
No one knows yet. DHS has not named a replacement. Given the pattern over the past 15 months, the next person will likely also be in an "acting" capacity. On policy, do not expect a major shift. The administration has made it clear that mass deportation is a top priority, and whoever gets the job will be chosen to execute that mission.
Did Lyons personally do anything wrong?
That is still being investigated. Lyons did not personally pull the trigger in Minneapolis. Individual agents made those decisions in the moment. But as director, he signed memos expanding ICE's arrest powers and oversaw the surge operations that put those agents in those situations. A federal judge found enough concern to order him to testify about whether ICE was following court rulings on detainee rights. Whether that rises to personal wrongdoing is a legal question that has not been answered.
What was the "Amazon" comment about?
A speech in April 2025 where Lyons said ICE should work "like a business" — comparing mass deportations to Amazon Prime deliveries. He argued the agency needed to get faster and more efficient at removing people from the country. Immigrant rights groups and faith leaders called the comparison dehumanizing — saying it treated real people like packages to be processed and shipped. The comment became a recurring symbol of what critics view as ICE's detachment from the human impact of its work.
Has anyone been fired or charged over the Minneapolis shootings?
Not so far. The Justice Department opened a civil rights probe into Alex Pretti's death but declined to open one into Renee Good's, saying it was not warranted. The ICE agent who shot Good — Jonathan Ross — has not been publicly identified as facing discipline. Two other officers in a separate non-fatal shooting were placed on administrative leave after DHS said they "made untruthful statements." As of today, no federal officer has been charged in either killing.
Does his resignation close the book on all this?
No — and it should not. The lawsuits keep going. The federal probe into Pretti's death keeps going. The Good family's questions are still unanswered. The court orders about detainee rights still stand. Lyons leaving the job does not make any of those issues go away. It just means a new person will answer for them — or try to avoid answering.

✦ What This Means for You

A resignation is a personnel move. But when the head of the country's most aggressive federal enforcement agency steps down mid-mission, it tells us something bigger about where America is right now.

1
Enforcement at scale has human costs on every side. ICE's mission is carried out by real people. Reports of Lyons being hospitalized for stress are a reminder that the people running these operations are operating under extreme pressure. That's not an excuse for anything the agency has done — but it is a signal that the current pace of mass deportation is not sustainable by normal human measures, for agents, for directors, or for the communities being targeted.
2
Two U.S. citizens are dead, and accountability is still unclear. Renee Good and Alex Pretti were American citizens shot by federal officers. Months later, state investigators still say they can't access key evidence. Good's car remains shrink-wrapped in an FBI warehouse. That is a stunning gap between what we expect accountability to look like and what is actually happening. A resignation at the top does not answer these questions — and shouldn't be allowed to.
3
Acting directors are running the country's biggest agencies. ICE has not had a Senate-confirmed director in years. This is part of a broader pattern across the federal government where "acting" officials — who don't require Senate confirmation — make enormous policy decisions. This bypasses a constitutional check that was designed to ensure accountability. It happens under both Republican and Democratic administrations, and it should concern voters regardless of party.
4
Policy shifts happen faster than oversight can keep up. ICE's mission has changed dramatically in the past 15 months. Deployment tactics, arrest protocols, and cooperation with local police have all shifted. Congress, the courts, and the public are still trying to understand what happened. When the person running an agency can be replaced overnight, the institutional memory and the accountability go with them. That makes oversight harder, not easier.
5
You still have a voice in this. Whether you support stronger immigration enforcement or oppose it, you have the right — and the responsibility — to tell your members of Congress how you feel. Federal budgets are set by lawmakers. Oversight hearings are scheduled by lawmakers. The confirmation of the next ICE director will happen through the Senate. Those are your representatives. Find them here.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Todd Lyons and why is he resigning?

Todd Lyons is the acting director of ICE. He submitted his resignation on April 16, 2026, and will leave May 31. He told DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin in a letter that he is taking a job in the private sector. Politico previously reported he had been hospitalized at least twice for stress during his tenure.

When is Todd Lyons' last day at ICE?

May 31, 2026. He is staying on during the transition. No replacement has been publicly named.

Why was Lyons under scrutiny?

He led ICE during a period of expanded mass deportation operations. The agency faced intense scrutiny after federal agents fatally shot two U.S. citizens — Renee Good and Alex Pretti — in Minneapolis in January 2026. A federal judge also ordered him to testify over concerns ICE failed to follow court directives on detainee rights.

Who will replace Todd Lyons?

No replacement has been named as of April 17, 2026. ICE has cycled through multiple acting directors since January 2025 and has had no Senate-confirmed director during the Trump second term.

What did DHS say about the resignation?

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin praised Lyons as "a great leader of ICE" who helped remove "murderers, rapists, pedophiles, terrorists, and gang members." The White House issued similar praise. None of the official statements mentioned the Minneapolis shootings or the court order.

What happened in Minneapolis?

During Operation Metro Surge, federal agents fatally shot Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother, on January 7, 2026. Alex Pretti, an ICU nurse, was fatally shot by CBP officers on January 24. Both were U.S. citizens. Minnesota and Hennepin County later sued the federal government for withholding evidence.

Was Lyons hospitalized?

Yes. Politico reported in March 2026 that he had been hospitalized at least twice in the prior seven months for stress-related issues, citing current and former administration officials.

Sources

  1. Axios — "Acting ICE director Todd Lyons to leave agency" — April 17, 2026 — https://www.axios.com/2026/04/17/acting-ice-director-todd-lyons-resigns
  2. NBC News / MS NOW — "Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons resigns" — April 16, 2026 — https://www.ms.now/news/acting-ice-director-todd-lyons-resigns
  3. Washington Times / AP — "ICE acting director Todd Lyons to resign at end of May, DHS says" — April 16, 2026 — https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/apr/16/todd-lyons-ice-acting-director-resign-end-may-dhs-says/
  4. Newsweek — "Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons to Resign: Everything We Know" — April 16, 2026 — https://www.newsweek.com/acting-ice-director-todd-lyons-to-resign-everything-we-know-11842617
  5. NPR — "Months after the ICE shootings in Minnesota, a federal probe remains elusive" — April 10, 2026 — https://www.npr.org/2026/04/10/nx-s1-5775847/alex-pretti-renee-good-ice-shootings-federal-investigations
  6. PBS NewsHour — "Man shot and killed by federal officers in Minnesota was an ICU nurse" — January 25, 2026 — https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/man-shot-and-killed-by-federal-officers-in-minnesota-was-an-icu-nurse-his-parents-say
  7. ABC News — "Minneapolis live updates: ICE arrest powers expanded, memo says" — January 31, 2026 — https://abcnews.com/US/live-updates/minneapolis-ice-shooting-live-updates-doj-investigating-apparent/?id=129340693
  8. Wikipedia — "Todd Lyons" biographical entry — updated April 16, 2026 — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Todd_Lyons
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