The Columbus Dispatch

ICE can’t keep track of deportable immigrants

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WASHINGTON — Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t deportatio­n officers aren’t doing a good job of keeping track of immigrants facing deportatio­n but released from jail, an internal government watchdog has concluded.

The Homeland Security Department’s inspector general found that ICE deportatio­n officers are routinely assigned to manage thousands of cases at a time and are so overburden­ed that the agency likely isn’t deporting all the immigrants it could.

Part of the problem, it said in a report, is that deportatio­n officers are routinely assigned duties beyond overseeing their caseloads, including checking in immigrants for routine interviews or driving immigrants from detention centers to court.

The result is that these officers don’t have enough time to make sure travel and identity documents are gathered for people ordered back to their home countries.

ICE “will likely not be able to keep up with growing numbers of deportable (immigrants),” the report said.

The auditors made five recommenda­tions, including that ICE come up with a plan to appropriat­ely staff deportatio­n operations. ICE agreed with all of the recommenda­tions and said the agency is working on fixes.

The report comes amid stepped-up enforcemen­t by ICE agents tasked with finding and arresting immigrants in the country illegally. Since President Donald Trump took office, ICE has arrested more than 21,000 people, an increase of about 40 percent compared with the same time period in 2016. Deportatio­ns during that same time have dipped slightly.

Trump has proposed hiring 10,000 new ICE agents.

Meanwhile, the Mexican government Thursday said the deportatio­n of a mother of four U.S.-born children from Ohio violated U.S. rules. Mexico’s Foreign Relations department said it is assisting Maribel Trujillo, who lived in southweste­rn Ohio after she entered the country illegally in 2002.

The department called her deportatio­n “a violation of the stated norms for deportatio­n,” given that Trujillo did not have a criminal record or represent a security risk.

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