Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Many detained aliens’ records clean

Half of 675 arrestees had traffic offenses or none at all, data from raids show

- MARIA SACCHETTI AND ED O’KEEFE

About half of the 675 illegal aliens picked up in roundups across the United States in the days after President Donald Trump took office either had no criminal conviction­s or had committed traffic offenses, mostly drunken driving, as their most serious crimes, according to data obtained by The Washington Post.

Records provided by congressio­nal aides Friday offered the most detailed look yet at the background­s of the individual­s rounded up and targeted for deportatio­n in early February by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents assigned to regional offices in Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, San Antonio and New York.

Two people had been convicted of homicide, 80 had been convicted of assault, and 57 had conviction­s for “dangerous drugs.” Many of the most serious criminals were given top billing in the enforcemen­t agency’s news statements about the operation.

The largest single group — 163 immigrants convicted of traffic offenses — was mentioned only briefly. More than 90 percent of those cases involved drunken driving, the agency said Friday. Of those taken into custody in the raids, 177 had no criminal conviction­s at all, though 66 had charges pending, largely immigratio­n or traffic offenses.

The raids were part of a nationwide crackdown dubbed Operation Cross Check, which accounts for a small portion of the 21,362 immigrants the Trump administra­tion took into custody for deportatio­n proceeding­s from January through mid-March.

The two-month total represents a 32 percent increase in deportatio­n arrests over the same period last year. Most are criminals, administra­tion officials have said. But 5,441 were not criminals, double the number of illegal aliens arrested for deportatio­n a year earlier. The administra­tion has released a detailed breakdown of the criminal records only of the raids in early February.

Trump has said public safety threats are his top priority. Shortly after he was elected, he vowed to first deport serious criminals from the United States.

But critics say immigratio­n agents instead have also targeted students, parents of U.S. citizens who do not have serious criminal records and minor offenders.

“That makes me so angry,” said Kica Matos, a spokesman for the Fair Immigratio­n Reform Movement, which is organizing demonstrat­ions Monday to protest Trump’s immigratio­n policies. She said that many of the DUI conviction­s are years old and that the data “confirms our worst fears, which is that this administra­tion is really trying to deport as many as possible regardless of whether they have a criminal record.”

President Barack Obama also deported thousands of people who never committed crimes, but toward the end of his administra­tion, he imposed strict new rules that prioritize­d the arrest of criminals.

The Trump administra­tion has said the current president also wants to prioritize deporting criminals. But officials add that anyone in the United States illegally could be detained and deported.

“As Secretary Kelly has made clear, [Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t] will no longer exempt classes or categories of removable aliens from potential enforcemen­t,” said agency spokesman Jennifer Elzea, referring to Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly. “All of those in violation of the immigratio­n laws may be subject to immigratio­n arrest, detention and, if found removable by final order, removal from the United States.”

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t arrested illegal aliens across the United States in February as part of Operation Cross Check, which seeks to detain illegals and which also occurred during the Obama administra­tion.

Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which favors limits on immigratio­n, said the enforcemen­t agency is properly enforcing immigratio­n laws by arresting criminals and people in the United States without papers.

“Those are legitimate reasons to remove people,” she said. “[Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t] officers are no longer operating under the restraints imposed by the Obama administra­tion. They’re not forced to look the other way when they encounter people who are removable.”

Congressio­nal aides said the informatio­n from the enforcemen­t agency follows months of frustratio­n from lawmakers that the agency is not responding fast enough to requests for informatio­n.

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