Frederick Muir, a Jamaican national with a prior first-degree murder conviction, has been arrested by federal immigration officers in Baltimore following his transfer from a Jessup correctional facility. According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Muir was arrested on an immigration detainer, has a final order of removal, and will remain in federal custody while deportation procedures are completed.
A brief report from Fox Baltimore revealed the arrest, identifying the detainee as Frederick Muir and stating that he was transferred to ICE custody after being held at a Jessup facility. The station reported that ICE Baltimore issued a photograph and labeled Muir as a “criminal illegal alien. ” So yet, the arrest’s main public notice has been that short post and the tiny write-up.
How the pickup happened
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When a removal order is issued, ICE frequently uses immigration detainers to transfer persons from local jails to federal custody. The Howard County Department of Corrections listed the Howard County Detention Center in Jessup as a county prison accepting ICE inmates, which corresponds to the transfer mentioned in the agency’s notice. When a local jail accepts a detainer, physical possession is transferred to Enforcement and Removal Operations, or ERO Baltimore, which handles processing and removal arrangements.
What ICE said
An earlier news release from ERO Baltimore regarding a comparable case described the office’s aims in greater detail. In that release, officials stated that they frequently focus interior enforcement on noncitizens with violent criminal offenses and final removal orders. It also indicated that those brought into ICE custody “will remain in ICE custody pending removal,” using language similar to the brief notification in Muir’s case, and directed the public to ICE’s reporting channels and statements for more information.
Why this matters in Maryland
All of this has landed in a place where immigration enforcement is already a hot topic. ICE operations in Maryland has increased in recent months, prompting street protests and policy debate in Baltimore and elsewhere. According to WBALTV, ICE arrests in Maryland nearly tripled between 2024 and 2025, with Baltimore accounting for a substantial share of those arrests. With those numbers in the background, even a brief federal announcement regarding a custody transfer is enough to pique interest.
What happens next
ICE told reporters that Muir has a final order of removal and would remain in federal detention while agents seek to carry it out, according to WBFF. According to federal regulations, a “final order of removal” is the point at which an immigration judge’s order is considered final and can be carried out. 8 C.F.R. § 1241.1 provides a formal definition. That status does not preclude legal challenges; thus, appeals or motions may potentially delay the actual removal date.
Officials have not provided any additional information on the underlying murder conviction or a precise timeline for removal. This item will be updated if agencies provide further information.