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ICE eyes rogue agents in hiring surge

Some fear flood of applicants could overwhelm immigratio­n office

- By Ron Nixon NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has vowed a hiring surge of 10,000 immigratio­n and customs officers to accelerate the deportatio­n of unauthoriz­ed immigrants. But the aggressive pace he has laid out risks adding to the ranks of rogue agents who have been charged with abusing immigrants.

Over the past decade, dozens of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents and contract guards responsibl­e for the detention and removal of unauthoriz­ed immigrants have been arrested and charged with beating people, smuggling drugs into detention centers, having sex with detainees and accepting bribes to delay or stop deportatio­ns, agency documents and court records show.

One agent took pictures of himself having sex with a minor in a foreign country after dropping off deportees. In another case, an ICE lawyer pretending to be an immigratio­n judge took bribes to remove official documents from the files of people awaiting deportatio­n.

These officials make up a fraction of the workforce at the agency, comprising almost 20,000 people, but former Homeland Security officials and human rights workers say that even a few bad officers can be a problem because they hold such

power over a vulnerable population.

John Roth, the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general, told a Senate committee in February that the agency would “face a number of challenges” in executing Trump’s executive orders because it had “inadequate systems to track and process applicants.”

Roth said his office is conducting an audit of previous hiring surges to help the agency avoid practices that may have led to corruption and misconduct by staff members.

Human rights activists expressed similar worries about a hiring wave.

“Given the things that have been documented in the past — beatings, sexual assaults and other abuses — it doesn’t seem like they have much oversight of the people they have now. And they want to add more?” said Justin Mazzola, deputy director of research for Amnesty Internatio­nal in New York.

Mazzola’s concern is borne out in several cases in which ICE employees have been accused or convicted of abuse.

Accusation­s of abuse

In Philadelph­ia, Justin Ford pleaded guilty to stealing money from unauthoriz­ed immigrants being processed for removal.

In New Jersey, Arnaldo Echevarria was convicted on charges of extracting bribes from people facing deportatio­n.

And in Detroit, Clifton Divers was arrested after authoritie­s said he had provided false informatio­n to federal immigratio­n authoritie­s in order to delay the deportatio­n of several immigrants facing removal.

Ford and Echevarria were deportatio­n officers who supervised unauthoriz­ed immigrants. Divers is a special agent with ICE Homeland Security Investigat­ions who prosecutor­s say took $5,000 from an immigratio­n attorney to put off several deportatio­ns by claiming that the immigrants had informatio­n about crimes.

John F. Kelly, the Homeland Security secretary, has directed the agency to “take all appropriat­e action to expeditiou­sly hire 10,000 agents and officers,” as sought by Trump in his executive order.

Kelly said the agency would maintain a rigorous hiring process and add personnel to ensure that it would not be compromise­d.

“I will not skimp on the training and the standards,” he told a congressio­nal panel last month.

According to immigratio­n and customs officials, agents and deportatio­n officers undergo pre-employment security checks and full background investigat­ions, and then reinvestig­ations every five or 10 years, depending on the sensitivit­y of the position.

Still, some former Homeland Security officials said they worried that in an effort to accelerate hiring, the agency would be tempted to lower its standards. Leaked documents outlining plans to beef up a sister agency, the Border Patrol, first reported in Foreign Policy magazine, show that Customs and Border Protection officials are considerin­g waiving polygraph tests for some applicants and applying less-stringent background checks to speed the hiring of 5,000 agents.

ICE does not administer lie detector tests to applicants. In 2016, the agency’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity sought permission to use pre-employment polygraph examinatio­ns for law enforcemen­t applicants similar to those used by the Border Patrol and Secret Service, but the proposal stalled.

James Tomsheck, a former assistant commission­er of Customs and Border Protection, said that while polygraph tests were not foolproof, they could help weed out applicants susceptibl­e to corruption.

“What needs to be implemente­d are protocols for keeping bad people from getting in in the first place,” he said. “Background checks alone are insufficie­nt at vetting people.”

No ‘respect for people’

Background checks failed to find problems with Ford, who authoritie­s said was facing financial problems when he stole from the vulnerable immigrants he transporte­d to detention facilities in New Jersey. He was arrested in March 2015 by a Philadelph­ia Police Department SWAT team as he dropped off an undercover agent at a detention facility.

Ford, who told authoritie­s that he had taken only a few hundred dollars from detainees “a couple of times,” pleaded guilty in June 2015.

Echevarria, who was indicted last year, accepted $75,000 in bribes in exchange for employment authorizat­ion documents for several immigrants in the country illegally, authoritie­s said. Prosecutor­s said he also had demanded sex in at least one instance.

Divers, who is awaiting trial, was arrested in October. According to court records, between 2009 and 2015 he took thousands of dollars from an immigratio­n attorney, to help with deportatio­n cases.

“Some of these guys don’t have any respect for the people they are rounding up or deporting,” said an ICE deportatio­n officer, who requested anonymity because he fears losing his job for speaking out publicly.

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