Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. arrests hundreds in ‘sanctury cities’

Four-day operation targeted places hostile to Trump’s immigratio­n policies

- NICK MIROFF

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has arrested hundreds of illegal aliens in cities that are hostile to the federal government’s deportatio­n crackdown, the latest salvo in the battle over so-called sanctuary cities.

Federal officials said Thursday that “Operation Safe City” specifical­ly targeted some of the fiercest opponents of President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies, including New York, Los Angeles, Baltimore and Washington.

In all, 498 aliens, including 28 in Baltimore and 14 in the District of Columbia, were taken into custody in a four-day operation that ended Wednesday, officials said. Just under two-thirds of those arrested had criminal records in the United States.

“We are never going to stop enforcing the laws that we’re authorized and required to do,” said Matthew Albence, an executive associate director of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. “If we need to go into these locations every week, we will go into these locations every week to remove these public-safety threats.”

The administra­tion for months has attempted to penalize jurisdicti­ons that refuse to cooperate with federal deportatio­n efforts, but it has been met with resistance. Federal courts have largely blocked Trump’s executive order in January that threatened to strip federal grant money from such cities and towns.

Hundreds of jurisdicti­ons restrict how much their officials can cooperate with immigratio­n agents. Some limit their access to jails or refuse to provide federal authoritie­s with informatio­n about immigrants arrested for local crimes.

Administra­tion officials say these cities shield criminals from deportatio­n. But advocates for immigrants say police responsibi­lities do not include enforcing civil immigratio­n laws and warn that doing so makes otherwise law-abiding immigrants less likely to report crimes.

“These raids are simply another attempt by the president and his anti-immigrant chiefs to bully cities into underminin­g the constituti­onal protection­s of all [their] residents, irrespecti­ve of their immigratio­n status,” said U.S. Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., chairman of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus.

Despite the administra­tion’s stepped-up arrest efforts, the latest data show that the number of deportatio­ns has fallen over the past 12 months.

Trump took office pledging

to round up as many as 3 million drug dealers, gang members and other criminals he said were living in the United States illegally. But the most recent figures from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t indicate the government may be having a hard time finding enough eligible “bad hombres,” as the president described them, to quickly meet those targets.

As of Sept. 9, three weeks before the end of fiscal 2017, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t had deported 211,068 immigrants, according to the most recent figures provided by the agency, compared with 240,255 people removed during fiscal 2016.

The lower totals are not for lack of effort. According to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, its agents have made 43 percent more arrests since Trump took office compared with the same period last year.

While the agency took into custody more immigrants with criminal records, the fastest-growing category of arrests since Trump’s inaugurati­on are those facing no criminal charges. The agency arrested more than 28,000 “non-criminal immigratio­n violators” between Jan. 22 and Sept. 2, according to the agency’s records, a nearly threefold increase over the same period in 2016.

“[The agency] has taken the gloves off, and they are going after whoever they want and for whatever reason,” said Ray Ybarra Maldonado, an immigratio­n attorney in Phoenix. “It’s a free-for-all now.”

There appear to be several factors that explain why deportatio­ns have declined despite the increase in arrests, according to policy experts, immigratio­n attorneys and current and former agency officials.

The number of people attempting to sneak across the U.S. border with Mexico fell dramatical­ly in the months after Trump’s inaugurati­on, reducing the supply of easy-to-deport immigrants. And while the administra­tion has directed Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to ramp up enforcemen­t, antipathy toward the president’s policies has supercharg­ed the fundraisin­g ability of advocacy groups and pro-bono law firms that help immigrants fight deportatio­n.

Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, a member of the House Committee on Homeland Security, said Trump “is keeping his promise to the American people to secure the border, deport illegal immigrants, and fix an immigratio­n system that has long been broken.”

Asked to comment on this year’s lower deportatio­n numbers, Smith blamed “sanctuary” policies and advocacy groups for holding Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t back.

“At every turn illegal immigratio­n activists sue the administra­tion and cooperatin­g local law enforcemen­t to stop increased enforcemen­t efforts,” he said in a statement.

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