Why ICE Released — and Didn’t Deport — Over 1,000 Illegal Immigrants Convicted of Murder and Sex Crimes
Fred Lucas
Immigration and Customs Enforcement released rather than deported 19,723 criminal illegal immigrants in 2015. This included 208 convicted of murder and more than 900 convicted of sex crimes. The bulk of offenders, more than 12,000, were convicted on drunk driving charges, according to data from the Center for Immigration Studies discussed at a congressional hearing Thursday. The convictions totaled 64,197 — 8,234 of which were violent crimes — among the illegals ICE released into nearly every state and territory of the United States, an average of 3.25 convictions each, the Washington Examiner reported. The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee heard from experts and government officials on the matter Thursday. “These are people that were here illegally, got caught committing a crime, were convicted of that crime, and then instead of deporting them, they were just released back out into the United States of America,” Oversight chairman Jason Chaffettz said. “Their convictions included sex offenses, assault, burglary, robbery, driving under the influence—and ICE told us that in FY2015, the agency released 19,723 criminal aliens, with a combined 64,197 convictions, including 934 sex offenses, 804 robberies, 216 kidnappings, and 196 homicide-related convictions.” Chaffettz called this “unacceptable” and “infuriating.” ICE Director Sarah Saldana explained that more than half were ordered freed by the courts. In more than 2,100 cases, the home country didn’t want them back. An ICE spokesperson deferred to the director’ testimony at the House hearing, where Saldena said:
The director added, “Additionally, federal courts have limited our detention authority, both in individual cases and for entire categories of aliens.” In 2014, the number of criminal illegal immigrants released was about 30,000. The reason for the decline is because of a decline in arrests, according to the Center for Immigration Studies. “In 2015, ICE made 119,772 arrests, or just half the number of arrests made in 2013, 232,287,” CIS Director of Policy Studies, Jessica M. Vaughan said in the analysis. The analysis says that under President Barack Obama’s executive actions on immigration, criminal immigrants are being ignored even after local enforcement called for ICE to conduct more deportations.
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