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ICE demanded Maine sheriff’s employment records following his criticism of arrest

The subpoena came a day after Cumberland County Sheriff Kevin Joyce blasted immigration agents for arresting one of his guards.
Kevin Joyce speaks during a press conference.
Cumberland County Sheriff Kevin Joyce speaks at a press conference at the Cumberland County Law Enforcement Center following the detention by ICE of one of his office’s corrections officer recruits. Photo by Linda Coan O'Kresik of the Bangor Daily News.
This story appears as part of a collaboration between The Maine Monitor and Maine Focus, the investigative team of the Bangor Daily News, a partnership to strengthen investigative journalism in Maine. You can show your support for this effort with a donation to The Monitor. Read more about the partnership.

Federal authorities demanded information about those employed at the Cumberland County jail a day after Sheriff Kevin Joyce blasted immigration agents for arresting one of his guards.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement served the county with a subpoena for the employment data on Jan. 23, Joyce told the Bangor Daily News in response to questions on Tuesday.

The request sought information about everyone who has worked at the jail since January 2025, the sheriff said. The county complied.

The reason for the subpoena, which has not previously been reported, is not entirely clear. It adds new detail to how ICE responded to the sheriff’s criticism of its tactics during the agency’s surge in Maine last month.

Joyce excoriated ICE during a press conference on the third day of the raid, a day after agents arrested an Angolan immigrant who worked as a corrections officer.

Hours later, the agency began removing detainees it had been housing at the jail under a longstanding contract between the federal government and the county. An ICE spokesperson said it could no longer partner with a jail that employed an “illegal alien.” 

But the guard, Emanuel Ludovic Mbuangi Landila, passed multiple background checks after applying for the job in late 2024 and had a work permit, Joyce told reporters last month. The sheriff described him as “squeaky clean.”

Landila is one of several immigrants the county jail has hired over the past two years to help fill chronic vacancies and the second to be detained by immigration authorities during President Donald Trump’s second term. A York County corrections officer was also detained by ICE amid its surge in Maine.

In a June interview, Joyce said the jail employed about 25 immigrants, all of whom passed background checks and required work permits to get hired.


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Callie Ferguson, Bangor Daily News

Callie Ferguson is the deputy investigative editor of Maine Focus and a reporter who focuses on Maine’s criminal justice system for the Bangor Daily News.

She was a finalist for the Livingston Award in 2022. The next year, she joined the inaugural class of local investigations fellows at The New York Times. Callie graduated from Bowdoin College and lives in Westbrook.

Contact Callie via email:

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Sawyer Loftus, Bangor Daily News

Sawyer Loftus is an investigative reporter at the Bangor Daily News and was named the state’s journalist of the year by the Maine Press Association in 2024.

Sawyer previously worked for Vermont Public Radio, The Burlington Free Press and VTDigger. He was also the editor-in-chief of the Vermont Cynic, the University of Vermont's independent student newspaper. He is based in Bangor.

Contact Sawyer via email:



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