Here’s What Happened in Denver and Aurora, CO After ICE Rounded Up Illegal Immigrant Gang Members

New police data shows major crime drops in Denver and Aurora, yet many residents still feel unsafe. Local officials say fear and perception haven’t caught up to reality.

Key Facts:

  • Denver homicides dropped 58% in Q1 2025 compared to Q1 2024, from 24 to 10 cases.
  • Aurora saw a 36% decline in homicides over the same period, from 11 to 7 cases.
  • Robberies and aggravated assaults also fell in Aurora, part of a 22.8% overall crime drop.
  • Denver Police Chief Ron Thomas launched a new downtown police unit after four stabbings at 16th Street Mall.
  • Despite falling crime, both cities struggle with a public perception that crime remains high.

The Rest of The Story:

Denver and Aurora have seen a significant decline in violent crime so far in 2025, following a multi-year trend.

According to the Major Cities Chiefs Association, homicides and other serious offenses are decreasing, even though public concern remains high.

In Denver, only 10 homicides occurred in the first quarter of 2025—less than half of the 24 from the same period in 2024.

Aurora also reported a drop in killings, down to 7 from 11.

Police chiefs in both cities acknowledged the ongoing disconnect between falling crime statistics and lingering public fear.

Both police departments are trying to address these concerns.

Denver has added a new downtown patrol force, and Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlin told city councilmembers that overall crime is down nearly 23%.

Yet concerns persist, fueled in part by political messaging and high-profile violent incidents.

Commentary:

While the data is clear—crime is falling—public confidence hasn’t kept pace.

That’s not surprising when the streets are still littered with the consequences of lenient immigration and crime policies.

The recent drop in homicides and assaults is good news, but it begs the question: why were things so bad to begin with?

When dangerous gang members and illegal migrants are allowed to roam freely, communities suffer.

These numbers show that when law enforcement is empowered, crime drops fast.

Chief Ron Thomas is right to increase visible patrols downtown.

But he should go further—support full cooperation with ICE, boost federal-local task forces, and start holding violent criminals accountable without delay.

The same goes for Aurora.

A nearly 23% drop in crime is a great start, but it won’t mean much if criminals keep getting released and public trust keeps falling.

President Trump was right to call attention to the crisis.

He’s not imagining things—he’s responding to real people who are tired of lawlessness.

The media often ignores the root cause of the crime problem: soft-on-crime Democrat policies that protect criminals over communities.

That includes sanctuary policies, limited cooperation with federal immigration enforcement, and defunding or demoralizing local police.

If you want to know why crime dropped, look at what changed—more patrols, more arrests, and more pressure to deal with the gangs flooding our neighborhoods.

What’s sad is that Democrats are still pushing back against basic law enforcement tools like arresting gang members and deporting violent criminals.

That’s not public safety—that’s reckless political theater.

This situation should be a wake-up call.

Public safety comes from action, not talk.

If you want results, stop voting for those who protect the thugs, not the victims.

The Bottom Line:

Crime is down in Denver and Aurora, but fear remains high because people know what they see and feel.

Numbers may help headlines, but only real enforcement builds trust.

When law enforcement is allowed to do its job—arresting and deporting dangerous criminals—communities get safer.

That’s the simple truth too many politicians refuse to admit.

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