Miami Herald (Sunday)

Deportatio­ns of migrants rise to more than 142,000 under Biden

- BY MARIA SACCHETTI

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t deported more than 142,000 immigrants in fiscal year 2023, nearly double the number from the year before, as the Biden administra­tion ramped up enforcemen­t to stem illegal border crossings, according to the agency’s annual report, published Friday.

Nearly 18,000 of those deported were parents and children traveling as family units, surpassing the 14,400 removed under the Trump administra­tion in fiscal 2020.

Federal officials said the removals adhered to the Biden administra­tion’s enforcemen­t strategy, which the Supreme Court upheld in June. Migrants who cross the border illegally and those who commit violent crimes or otherwise pose a safety threat are priorities for removal. The ICE report covered the period from Oct. 1, 2022, to Sept. 30.

The increase in deportatio­ns is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.Mexico border than interior enforcemen­t, which Biden has discourage­d in most cases.

“ICE continues to disrupt transnatio­nal criminal organizati­ons, remove threats to national security and public safety, uphold the integrity of U.S. immigratio­n laws, and collaborat­e with colleagues across government and law enforcemen­t in pursuit of our mission to keep U.S. communitie­s safe,” said ICE Deputy Director Patrick J. Lechleitne­r.

Just 2,500 of the 72,000 non-criminals deported from the United States in fiscal 2023 were in the interior of the country, where dozens of sanctuary cities and towns have passed ordinances seeking to limit ICE from detaining migrants. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in 2021 that being undocument­ed should not be the sole basis for removing someone from the country.

President Biden took office promising to create a more humane immigratio­n system, and he attempted to pause deportatio­ns temporaril­y in the hope that Congress would create a path to citizenshi­p for the estimated 11 million undocument­ed immigrants in the United States.

But that hope faded amid fierce resistance from Republican­s and public disapprova­l of the record number of border apprehensi­ons, which surpassed 2 million for the first time in 2022 and is expected to do so again this year.

The Biden administra­tion nonetheles­s has sharply reduced interior enforcemen­t, halting workplace immigratio­n raids and sparing most undocument­ed immigrants from being deported. Officials also stopped detaining families in ICE-run facilities.

But officials have also warned migrants against hiring smugglers to take them on a dangerous journey north to the U.S.Mexico border and have said people who breach the border would face penalties. Officials have reinstitut­ed removals to countries such as Venezuela and have publicized deportatio­ns as a signal to migrants that the government will enforce immigratio­n laws.

Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which favors immigratio­n enforcemen­t, said the increase in deportatio­ns remains a tiny share of those arriving at the southern border.

The 18,000 family units deported last year is far smaller than the 621,000 parents and children taken into custody at the border during the same period. Most were released to await a court date, she said.

ICE’s workload has swelled under Biden. The number of migrants on the deportatio­n docket has risen from 2.6 million in fiscal 2018 to about 6.2 million last fiscal year. The agency has approximat­ely 6,000 immigratio­n officers.

All told, officials deported 142,580 immigrants to about 180 countries last fiscal year, including more than 44,000 from the interior and more than 98,000 from the border, the report said. Another 60,000 people were expelled under a Trump-era policy that ended in May.

In the previous fiscal year, officials deported more than 72,000 immigrants.

Vaughan criticized the Biden administra­tion for allowing in migrants from all over the world without a clear path to stay permanentl­y. She said the administra­tion could have referred migrants to refugee programs or deported them to better control the border.

“Basically Biden suspended enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws for all intents and purposes except against the most serious criminals,” she said. “That’s why we’ve seen such an explosion in illegal migration. People know that if they make it to the border they’re going to be allowed in.”

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