Los Angeles Times

White House clears way for far more deportatio­ns

Homeland Security chief implements Trump’s order to end most limits on removing anyone in the U.S. illegally.

- By Brian Bennett and Del Quentin Wilber

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion swept aside nearly all restrictio­ns Tuesday on targeting for removal the 11 million people in the U.S. illegally, a vast expansion of the federal government’s deportatio­n priorities as the president pursues his promised crackdown on illegal immigratio­n.

In a pair of memos, Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly instructed immigratio­n officers to widen the net and set the stage for hiring thousands more enforcemen­t agents as he moved to implement the executive order on illegal immigratio­n that President Trump signed during his first week in office.

“The president wanted to take the shackles off individual­s in these agencies,” White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told reporters Tuesday.

With the new guidelines, Trump took a significan­t step closer to realizing his and top aides’ vision for reducing the immigrant population in the U.S.

Though Kelly emphasized that immigratio­n officers should focus first on deporting convicted criminals or those charged with crimes, his directives nonetheles­s unleashed deportatio­n officers to conduct more raids in immigrant communitie­s, detain people who don’t have criminal conviction­s and remove people for minor infraction­s such as driving without a license.

Democratic lawmakers and advocates alarmed by the instructio­ns called them a radical shift in policy and enforcemen­t tactics.

“No matter how much they deny it, it is clear that the White House is setting in motion their mass deportatio­n plan, directing immigratio­n agents to round up and quickly deport anyone who is undocument­ed,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement.

Kelly’s instructio­ns also expand so-called expedited removals, in which someone in the U.S. illegally is thrown out without appearing before an immigratio­n judge.

Such deportatio­ns, which had been limited to people caught within 100 miles of the border within two weeks of entering the

country, will apply to people caught anywhere in the country within two years of arriving illegally.

Immigratio­n officers now can also charge parents who pay smugglers to bring their children into the country illegally with immigratio­n violations.

Trump administra­tion officials said they were fulfilling the pledge of the president, who promised more aggressive enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws, and were also responding to a rise in illegal border crossings.

“A surge of illegal immigratio­n at the southern border has overwhelme­d federal agencies and resources and has created a significan­t national security vulnerabil­ity to the United States,” Kelly wrote in one of the memos, adding that immigratio­n courts are experienci­ng “a historic backlog of removal cases.”

In October and November, the Obama administra­tion apprehende­d more than 90,000 immigrants along the southern border, an increase of about 42% over the same period in 2015, according to Kelly.

The Obama administra­tion, which deported a record number of migrants, took a far less disruptive stance on immigratio­n by focusing on those who were either convicted of a crime, had recently crossed the border or had repeatedly entered the country illegally.

Immigratio­n officials can act on the new priorities immediatel­y.

Among their first targets could be the more than 940,000 people who already have a final order of removal from an immigratio­n judge and have either refused to leave or were allowed to stay temporaril­y, often because of the hardship their deportatio­n would cause to family in the U.S.

Other efforts will take time. Kelly’s guidelines call for hiring 10,000 more immigratio­n enforcemen­t officers and 5,000 Border Patrol agents and for the immediate planning and building of a wall along the southern border, all of which Trump ordered earlier. The Border Patrol has already identified places for building new walls and fencing near El Paso, Tucson and El Centro, and is studying additional locations.

Those steps would require funds from Congress, and it is unclear whether Republican lawmakers will sign off on them.

The White House is expected to ask Congress for the money as part of a larger funding request in the weeks ahead.

Kelly’s memos did not specify how the Trump administra­tion plans to deal with 750,000 so-called Dreamers, immigrants brought to the country illegally as children and granted work permits under an initiative by President Obama.

Trump has publicly wavered on whether to deport the Dreamers, and the White House has identified ways to remove them from the U.S. without Trump’s fingerprin­ts.

Kelly and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson were to travel Wednesday to Mexico City to meet with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto and other top officials in an attempt to repair relations between the countries that have been frayed by Trump’s hard line on immigratio­n and incendiary rhetoric on Mexico.

To clear the way for removals, Kelly and Tillerson have also been instructed to punish countries that refuse to accept people being deported, including by withholdin­g visas from citizens and issuing formal diplomatic complaints, according to the Homeland Security Department.

About 23 countries currently don’t accept deportatio­ns from the U.S., including Afghanista­n, Algeria, China, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia and Zimbabwe. Mexico is not among them.

Courts have ruled that people from those countries can’t be held to await deportatio­n indefinite­ly, even if they have a violent criminal conviction. As a result, more than 8,000 immigrants with criminal records have been released in the last three years.

Kelly’s memos also restarted a program called Secure Communitie­s that notifies immigratio­n agents when people in the country illegally are booked into local jails. In addition, the Homeland Security Department will expand a program in which local police help capture those violating immigratio­n laws.

Top officials at U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t are encouragin­g federal prosecutor­s to lower the threshold for bringing criminal charges on immigratio­n offenses.

ICE also plans to create a new office, the National Lead Developmen­t Center, to refer immigratio­n-fraud and benefit-fraud cases to prosecutor­s.

The Homeland Security Department will also establish an office to assist victims of crimes committed by those in the country illegally, according to the memos.

In his memos, Kelly also instructed immigratio­n officials to expand the number and size of detention facilities to hold asylum seekers and people awaiting hearings in immigratio­n court. More than 1,100 detention beds have been added since Trump was sworn in last month. Cases for people held in detention can move more quickly, and they can be deported faster than those released and told to appear in court.

Advocates for immigrants are concerned about the poor conditions in detention facilities, many of which are also local jails and have a track record of substandar­d medical care. Also, immigrants in detention facilities have a much harder time getting lawyers.

ICE officials told lawmakers last week that although Trump’s executive order could allow them to deport all 11 million people in the country illegally, they don’t have the resources to do so, according to Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-N.M.), chairwoman of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus.

“Everyone’s at risk,” Lujan Grisham said. “That’s pretty chilling.”

‘No matter how much they deny it, it is clear that the White House is setting in motion their mass deportatio­n plan.’ — Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), Senate minority leader

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? BORDER PATROL agents detain Central American immigrants last month near McAllen, Texas.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times BORDER PATROL agents detain Central American immigrants last month near McAllen, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States