Tuesday, February 16, 2021

IS JOE BIDEN BAILING OUT WALL STREET CRONIES.... AGAIN??? - Only Nine Percent of $1.9 Trillion COVID Bill Goes Towards Vaccinations

 

Jason Smith: Only Nine Percent of $1.9 Trillion COVID Bill Goes Towards Vaccinations

C-SPAN
Volume 90%

Rep. Jason Smith (R-MO), the ranking member of the House Budget Committee, said during a Ways and Means Committee hearing last week that despite the Democrats’ rhetoric about defeating the coronavirus, only nine percent of the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill goes towards vaccinations.



Biden’s DHS Releasing Border Crossers into U.S. Without Coronavirus Tests

Border Crossers with Children
Guillermo Arias/AFP/Getty Images
3:15

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is not requiring all border crossers to get tested for the Chinese coronavirus before releasing them into the United States, the agency confirmed to Breitbart News.

A DHS spokesperson responded to a question from Breitbart News about whether President Joe Biden supported mandatory coronavirus testing for border crossers released into the U.S. interior.

“As Customs and Border Protection always has, it adjusts resources as needed to meet the demand at the border and regularly screens individuals for signs of health issues when they are encountered, including COVID-19,” the spokesperson told Breitbart News. “Anyone who shows signs of illness receives the appropriate medical treatment.”

The response confirms that untested border crossers are continuing to be released into the U.S. interior as long as they are not exhibiting coronavirus symptoms.

On the other hand, DHS officials have said that migrants enrolled in the now-defunct Remain in Mexico program, set to be released into the U.S. interior this month, will have to undergo coronavirus testing. Internal communications reviewed by Breitbart News, though, show no mentions of this requirement.

“Individuals processed through this program will be tested for COVID-19 before entering the United States,” the administration confirmed.

Most border crossers apprehended and released at the southern border also appear to enjoy a less stringent testing standard that even foreign travelers to the U.S. experience.

Shortly after he was inaugurated, President Joe Biden signed an executive order requiring foreign travelers to the U.S. “to the extent feasible” to produce a negative test for the coronavirus prior to entry and to either isolate or quarantine themselves for several days after they arrive.

This week, Breitbart News reported that 25,600 migrants enrolled in the Remain in Mexico program are to be released into communities in El Paso and Brownsville, Texas, and San Diego, California. The mass release effort comes after Biden ended the program despite its effectiveness in drastically reducing asylum fraud.

Data from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University (TRAC) has previously revealed that about 85 percent of asylum cases by Central Americans are rejected and a total of nearly 70,000 migrants were returned to their native countries after not meeting asylum requirements since the program was created.

The TRAC data found that tens of thousands of migrants actually gave up on their asylum cases while they waited in Mexico because they were aware that their claims were not valid. By December 2020, more than 31,000 migrants had left Mexico and returned to their native countries without having their cases heard.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki claimed last week that the U.S.-Mexico border was “not open” during an exchange with Breitbart News even as at least 2,000 border crossers have been released into the U.S. interior between February 1 to 10. Tens of thousands more are expected to be released in the coming months.

BIDEN PARTNERS WITH MEXICO TO ORCHESTRATE

ANOTHER MASSIVE MEX INVASION OF DEM VOTING

ILLEGALS.

https://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2020/11/the-biden-amnesty-and-mexicos-planned.html

"Mexican president candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador called for mass immigration to the United States, declaring it a "human right". We will defend all the (Mexican) invaders in the American," Obrador said, adding that immigrants "must leave their towns and find a life, job, welfare, and free medical in the United States."

"Fox’s Tucker Carlson noted Thursday that Obrador ha

previously proposed granting AMNESTY TO MEXICAN DRUG 

CARTELS. “America is now Mexico’s social safety net, and that’s

a very good deal for the Mexican ruling class,” Carlson added." 

"Many Americans forget is that our country is located against a socialist failed state that is promising to descend even further into chaos – not California, the other one. And the Mexicans, having reached the bottom of the hole they have dug for themselves, just chose to keep digging by electing a new leftist presidente who wants to surrender to the cartels and who thinks that Mexicans have some sort of “human right” to sneak into the U.S. and demographically reconquer it." 

                                            KURT SCHLICHTER

As in 2016, Democrats advance a corrupt ruling-class candidate. Like the dead man Gary Ernst, Democrats want people to vote for Joe Biden so they can swap him out for Kamala Harris, already a beneficiary of voter fraud and with the exception of Xavier Becerra possibly the worst attorney general in California history (NOW IN JOE BIDEN'S CORRUPT CABINET).


Report Understates No-Show Rates in Immigration Court

Immigration lawyers' group uses skewed method to determine share of in absentia removals

By Andrew R. Arthur on February 9, 2021

Central to many immigration debates (particularly over the detention of asylum applicants and migrants who have entered illegally and claimed a fear of return) has been whether aliens placed into removal proceedings actually appear at those proceedings, or whether they skip their proceedings and simply disappear into the United States. A recent "Special Report" from the American Immigration Council (AIC), an affiliate of AILA, the immigration lawyers lobby, offers its take on this question. It makes some interesting points, but its final conclusion is flawed.

The report claims that only 17 percent of aliens failed to appear in immigration court, which the group touts in huge letters on its home page: "IMMIGRANTS DO SHOW UP FOR COURT". A more accurate reading of the data in the report reveals a no-show rate that is double that, with more than one-third of case completions over an 11-year period resulting in in absentia orders of removal.

Background

I have written on this topic before, most recently in connection with claims made at the last presidential debate in October. Both Donald Trump and Joe Biden focused on the rate at which aliens entering illegally with children ("family units" or FMUs) appeared — or not — at their subsequent removal proceedings.

Briefly, aliens who are apprehended entering illegally along the border or at the ports of entry without proper documents are subject to expedited removal — that is, being removed from the United States without being placed in removal proceedings before an immigration judge (IJ) — under section 235(b)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).

If, however, the alien claims a fear of return, and that fear is found to be credible by a USCIS asylum officer (AO), the alien will be referred to an IJ to apply for asylum. Alien children in FMUs are required to be released within 20 days under a 2016 circuit-court interpretation of the 1997 Flores settlement agreement (FSA), and to avoid family separation, the adults are generally released, as well.

At issue in the October debate (although it was not framed as such) was whether aliens who had been released after AOs had found that they had a credible fear of return — and in particular FMUs — actually appeared at their removal proceedings, or failed to and were ordered removed in absentia by an IJ.

As I noted in a later post, the real question is whether alien respondents who were ordered removed by IJs — in absentia or otherwise — actually left, and almost 600,000 had failed to do so by the end of FY 2019. But that in absentia rate is still an issue, as the October debate showed.

Determining the rate at which alien respondents fail to appear before IJs is more difficult that it may sound, but there are still sound statistics on which to make an assessment.

EOIR Statistics

The Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR, the DOJ component with jurisdiction over IJs and the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)), has provided data on the total number of in absentia removal orders from FY 2014 through the first quarter of FY 2021, but that simply gives you the numerator. Figuring out the denominator (that is, the total number of cases in which aliens are not ordered removed in absentia) is subject to interpretation.

I will note that EOIR uses the total number of "initial case completions" (ICCs) during the period of time in which those in absentia orders are issued as the denominator. An ICC "is the first dispositive decision rendered by an" IJ. For example, in removal proceedings, the IJ can order the respondent removed; grant the respondent voluntary departure in lieu of removal, relief, or protection; or terminate the case. Orders changing venue, or granting continuances or administrative closure, are not counted as ICCs.

EOIR actually has provided two different sets of in absentia numbers.

In its Statistics Yearbook for FY 2018 (the latest edition of that compilation), EOIR states that in FY 2018, there were 46,480 in absentia orders issued compared to 182,421 ICCs in removal proceedings, an in absentia rate of almost 25.5 percent.

In a more recent EOIR chart comparing in absentia rates, EOIR states that there were a slightly lower number of in absentia orders in FY 2018 (46,105), compared to a much lower number of total orders (118,931), for a total in absentia rate of 39 percent.

The statistics in that chart include not just removal cases, but older deportation and exclusion cases as well. In addition, that chart excludes aliens who were detained. Detained aliens have to show up for their proceedings — I issued only one in absentia removal order out of thousands of orders I issued as an IJ in a detained facility, for an alien who refused to leave his cell. Therefore excluding detained aliens gives a more accurate picture of the actual in absentia rate.

As for the lower number of total in absentia orders, that chart (which was prepared in January 2021, more recently than the FY 2018 Statistics Yearbook, which was updated in August 2019) likely excludes aliens who had been ordered deported, excluded, and removed, but whose cases were subsequently reopened.

In other words, the more recent in absentia chart almost definitely presents a more accurate picture of in absentia rates in immigration courts than the Statistics Yearbook because the data is more up to date, considers all proceedings (not just removals), and excludes detained cases.

AIC Statistics

The AIC report disagrees with EOIR's method of determining the percentage of in absentia removals (which it describes as the "IJ decisions method"). Under that method and using AIC's data, for example, the FY 2018 in absentia rate was 41 percent, higher than AIC argues is accurate.

The report analyzed FOIA data from "2,797,437 nondetained removal proceedings" between FY 2008 and FY 2018, and proposed two alternative calculation methods for determining the in absentia removal rate.

"All Completions" Calculation Method

The first is what it describes as the "all completions" method. That includes in the denominator what AIC describes as "initial case completion[s] of any kind, including both initial [IJ] decisions and other [IJ] completions, such as administrative closures."

AIC excludes detained cases, but apparently only considers removal proceedings, and not deportation or exclusion cases. Perhaps for that reason, the number of in absentia IJ decisions in FY 2018 is listed in that report as 44,764, lower than the number in either the EOIR in absentia chart or the Statistics Yearbook for that fiscal year.

Using the "all completions" method, AIC concludes that the in absentia removal rate in FY 2018 was 38 percent, and that the total in absentia rate between FY 2008 and FY 2018 was 27 percent.

"All Matters" Calculation Method

The second method, deemed by AIC the "all matters" method, uses "all initial case completions (including initial [IJ] decisions and other [IJ] completions) and pending cases".

Using that much larger denominator, the in absentia rate in FY 2018 drops to 5 percent, while the in absentia rate for the period FY 2008 to FY 2018 falls to 17 percent.

Analysis of AIC's Calculation Methods

As shown, AIC's "all completions" method and "all matters" method result in a lower percentage of aliens who were ordered removed in absentia, because the denominator is much larger under each. In my opinion, those methods erroneously inflate the denominator, and for that reason, present a skewed picture of the actual in absentia rate.

"All Completions"

The "all completions" method of calculating the rate, as noted, includes administrative closures in the total number of IJ completions.

Administrative closure, however, is not a "completion", unless, respectfully, the observer is a cynic.

The BIA has described administrative closure as "a procedural tool created for the convenience of the Immigration Courts and the" BIA. It explained:

Administrative closure ... is used to temporarily remove a case from an [IJ's] active calendar or from the [BIA's] docket. In general, administrative closure may be appropriate to await an action or event that is relevant to immigration proceedings but is outside the control of the parties or the court and may not occur for a significant or undetermined period of time.

Note the use of the word "temporarily" in the excerpt above. Administrative closure does not "complete" a case, it simply puts it on hold, indefinitely. Most importantly for purposes of this analysis, alien respondents are not required to appear in court as long as their cases are administratively closed, and therefore could not have been ordered removed in absentia during that period.

Administrative closure was a tool that was used extensively, particularly between FY 2012 and FY 2017. Between FY 2008 (when there were 171,820 cases subject to administrative closure) and FY 2011 (when there were 178,248), fewer than 4,000 cases were administratively closed annually.

Beginning in FY 2012, however, more than 10,000 cases were administratively closed annually, and more than 40,000 in FY 2016 alone. In that fiscal year, the total number of administratively closed cases stood at 324,762, while at the end of that fiscal year there were 521,507 pending cases in immigration court. In other words, there were 62 percent as many administratively closed cases as there were active cases pending before IJs in FY 2016.

Then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions ended the practice in May 2018. Sessions did not, however, order that all cases that had been administratively closed be placed back on the IJs' and BIA's dockets. On January 7, there were still 307,986 administratively closed cases.

On that date, by comparison, there were 1,277,152 pending cases on IJs' dockets, not counting administrative closures. This means that adding administrative closures to the total would increase the number of pending cases before the immigration courts by almost one-fifth.

And here is where the cynic has a point. As EOIR reported on January 7: "For inactive pending cases, the average length of time a case has been administratively closed is 5,961 days (approximately 16 years) and the median length of time is 4,032 days (over 11 years)." It is difficult to assert that a case has been "temporarily" removed from the docket when more than a decade has passed with no action.

But that means that in the average administratively closed case, the respondent has not been expected to appear in immigration court for some 16 years. Adding those cases to the in absentia denominator is going to drive down the percentage of no-shows significantly. And, as shown above, it does.

"All Matters"

Using AIC's "all matters" method drives down the in absentia rate even more, as noted above.

There is a certain level of logic to using that calculus at first blush (if administrative closures were excluded, of course, for the reasons explained above). It could be argued that comparing in absentia orders to all IJ orders (as the "IJ decisions" method does), overstates the in absentia number because it does not consider all of the cases in which the respondent has appeared and will appear.

That is a salient point, because most aliens have more than one hearing before the IJ issues a final decision in the matter, or in the terms above, before the ICC occurs. The respondent has to appear at all of those hearings (with the rare exception of cases in which his or her appearance is waived), and a failure to appear at any of the hearings can result in a final order in absentia.

In my experience (and according to the AIC report's statistics), a large number of aliens who are no-shows (more than 45 percent) fail to appear at their first hearing (known as the "initial master calendar hearing"), so it could be argued that comparing just in absentia final orders during a period of time to all cases in which the IJ issues a final order skews the total in absentia percentage.

And, as that report shows, more than 15 percent of all ICCs occur at the fourth hearing, more than 10 percent of ICCs follow the fifth, and more than 5 percent of ICCs occur after the sixth and seventh, respectively. In some small percentage of cases, the case is not completed until 20 or more hearings have been held.

That raises the question of why any removal proceeding would require more than 20 separate hearings, but it also demonstrates the problems with calculating the in absentia rate. The denominator can be a moving target as new cases are added, while the numerator is a fixed one.

But it also shows why the "IJ decisions" method is the best one for calculating the in absentia rate.

The AIC report, as noted, examines the in absentia rate over an 11-year period, from FY 2008 through FY 2018. During that period, there were 316,089 in absentia orders issued, and 614,182 IJ decisions issued that were not in absentia, that is, where the ICC occurred after the respondent appeared for every hearing. Using those numbers, the in absentia rate is 34 percent of the total, or greater than one-in-three.

By looking at ICCs over a broad swath of time, pending cases get decided, and the true in absentia rate becomes clearer. As noted, many aliens fail to appear at the initial master calendar hearing, but not all, as the AIC report reveals.

The percentage of final in absentia ICCs is higher after the second hearing than the percentage of ICCs issued following that second hearing where the alien appears (almost 25 percent vs. less than 20 percent).

It is only after the third hearing that the IJ is likely to issue a final decision in a matter in which the alien has actually shown up than when the alien hasn't (just less than 20 percent vs. more than 10 percent), and some small percentage of respondents are ordered removed in absentia at the tenth hearing.

For this reason, the annual in absentia rate under the "all matters" method ranges from 4 percent to 8 percent (in most of the years studied it is 5 percent to 6 percent), but the total in absentia rate under that method for the 11-year period is 17 percent. It might seem counter-intuitive that the total would be two to three times as high than the annual percentage (it was to me at first), but it makes more sense the longer you think about it.

Contained in the annual number of pending cases are ones in which the alien respondent is not going to appear, but that failure to appear has not happened yet, either because the alien is in proceedings, but has not yet had an initial master calendar hearing, or because the alien has had prior hearings that he or she has attended, but will fail to appear at in the future.

Dividing the number of in absentia orders by the number of non-in absentia orders and pending cases annually misses that fact. Adding in the number of administratively closed cases (in which the alien is not required to appear in court at all) simply skews the data even more.

Conclusion

Using the EOIR/"IJ decisions" method over an extended period of time provides the best picture of the actual in absentia rate. It excludes detained cases (which aliens as a rule are all but guaranteed of attending), and lowers the uncertainty that comes with examining the total number of in absentia orders — which is more or less fixed — against a pending caseload that will result in some aliens appearing, and some not.

AIC's proposed "all completions" method of determining the in absentia removal rate provides a skewed picture of that rate, because it includes more than 300,000 cases that are administratively closed — and at which the respondent is not required to appear — artificially bloating the denominator of total cases, and thereby lowering the actual percentage of aliens who were required to appear for hearings, but failed to do so.

Its "all matters" method of determining that rate simply compounds this issue, by adding in the (massive) number of pending cases to the denominator along with the number of administratively closed cases.

Most of the respondents in those pending cases will likely appear, but a significant minority will not. Despite this fact, the "all matters" method includes those cases as if they have appeared and will appear — until they don't.

The one downside to assessing the in absentia removal rate over an extended period of time is that it assumes that the future flow of aliens in removal proceedings will appear in similar numbers to the past and present flow. That will not necessarily be true, particularly if the so-called "Biden effect" occurs, and migrants enter the United States illegally and make questionable fear claims when they are apprehended by CBP, in order to stay and work in this country permanently.

We know that the number of aliens who were found to have credible fear by AOs and then failed to appear at their removal proceedings spiked in FY 2019, to 17,841, up from 10,713 the year before.

That increase coincided with a rise in positive AO credible fear determinations between FY 2017 (60,566), FY 2018 (74,677), and FY 2019 (75,252), and an escalation in total CBP encounters at the Southwest border during that period, from 415,517 in FY 2017 to 521,090 in FY 2018 to 977,509 in FY 2019.

Only time will tell. But at least we have an idea of how to measure the in absentia removal rate. It's just not either of the ones proposed by AIC.


ICE Records Reveal Disturbing Impact of Biden Enforcement Freeze

By Jessica M. Vaughan on February 10, 2021

ICE personnel are alarmed and discouraged by President Biden's executive order that all but shuts down immigration enforcement within the country. The public should be, too. According to several sets of ICE records I have analyzed, confirmed by conversations with ICE officials in the field, this order will prevent the arrest and removal of nearly all of ICE's caseload of criminals — including many aliens who have been convicted of the most serious crimes on the books. And the parts of the country that will be most affected will be those areas that have cooperated with ICE to ensure that criminal aliens are removed — such as Georgia and Texas.

To begin to assess the impact of the order, I examined case records of all aliens removed by ICE in FY 2018, which I obtained through a FOIA request, and other sets of data that have been published in the ICE FOIA Library. Here's what these records reveal:

In 2018, ICE removed 95,360 aliens from the interior of the country. If the new Biden deportation policies had been in force and applied to ICE's 2018 interior caseload, a total of 91,993, or 96.5 percent, would not have been subject to removal. Only about 3,367, or 3.5 percent, would have been considered appropriate to remove from the country.

This is not because these aliens are harmless or sympathetic cases. After all, ICE's interior caseload is already comprised primarily of convicted criminals. It is because under the new rules only a very narrow set of cases of aliens can be deported — only those classified as current "aggravated felons", or the most serious criminals who are still in the custody of local authorities. Most prior convictions do not count, and are categorically excused if they occurred 10 years or more ago.

For example, said one ICE officer: "If a sex offender, or gang member, or other felon got prosecuted 11 years ago and got deported, comes back, gets removed again under 1326 [illegal re-entry after deportation, a felony], comes back again and gets arrested for simple theft or DUI, and one of our officers finds him in the jail, even though he is a prior deportee and aggravated felon, because it's over 10 years old and not related to what he was just arrested for, we can't touch him."

As a result of these strict conditions, only a rare few of the criminal aliens arrested throughout the country will be removable, and even many aliens who do have convictions for crimes of violence would be protected if the convictions occurred more than 10 years ago.

Table 1 shows the top 50 of the most serious criminal charges of aliens removed in 2018 who would no longer be subject to deportation under the Biden policy (the charges are the most serious charge on the alien's record). The list includes more than 10,000 aliens with drunk driving charges or convictions, 788 with homicide charges, more than 2,000 with weapons charges, more than 2,000 with drug trafficking charges, and more than 370 charged with rape. In addition, it includes many aliens removed because of repeated or serious immigration crimes, such as re-entry after deportation, immigration fraud, or human smuggling.

These examples illustrate one of the more alarming aspects of this directive. While it has been characterized in the media as allowing ICE to go after all of the "serious" criminals, in fact, according to the official guidance issued by acting ICE Director Tae Johnson to ICE officers, which I have obtained, still it excuses any and all serious crimes that were committed in the past, especially if they are unrelated to the latest criminal conviction that brought them to the attention of ICE. That is how so many murderers and rapists show up in the 2018 caseload as avoiding deportation under the Biden policy.

The relevant part of the guidance reads as follows:

Individuals incarcerated within federal, state, and local prisons and jails released on or after the issuance of this memorandum who have been convicted of an "aggravated felony," as that term is defined in section 101(a) (43) of the Immigration and Nationality Act at the time of conviction, and are determined to pose a threat to public safety. [Emphasis added.]

This means ICE can arrest only those criminal aliens who are actually in the custody of authorities — in other words, inmates. If they are released due to sanctuary policies, the ICE officer must submit the request to arrest the released criminal alien all the way up the chain of command to be approved by Johnson, the acting ICE director. If the past is any guide, he should be getting at least a dozen of these to review every day, and I hope some reporter or member of Congress will ask for information on the ones that he refuses to sign off on. I hope we don't have to find out when someone gets killed by one Johnson didn't sign off on.

Said one ICE officer: "With locals not cooperating on telling us about releases of deportable criminals we identify, we now need specific written agency approval to make any arrest of an agg felon once they are released. Even courthouse arrests are considered at large arrests, so we are dead in the water."

Another pointed out how the "aggravated felony" definition is especially problematic in California and other Ninth Circuit states:

[Judges in the Ninth Circuit] routinely rule that many crimes are not aggravated felonies. To make it worse in California, the DA's and public defenders often know what charges get people deported, so they work out deals to have the alien plead to another charge, just to avoid deportation. Even when that's not the case, California in general does not like to convict people of the crimes they commit, or they allow them to plead to a lesser charge and a lesser sentence. This allows the alien to stay under the aggravated felony bar.

In the memo, Johnson further spells out classes of convicted criminals that ICE officers may no longer arrest:

  1. Drug based crimes (less serious offenses), simple assault, DUI, money laundering, property crimes, fraud, tax crimes, solicitation, or charges without convictions.
  2. Where a crime is very old — over 10 years and not the reason for the individuals most recent apprehension.
  3. Prior removals or convictions under 1325 or 1326.
  4. Gang tattoos or only loose affiliation in records with gang activity.

Further:

If there is any question as to whether an individual falls into the category of posing a public safety threat, managers should err on the side of caution and postpone the individual's removal until a full assessment, in coordination with local Office of Chief Counsel, is conducted.

In other words, ICE officers should err on the side of release and risk to the public.

A more detailed listing of the criminal histories of the 2018 removal cases can be found here. To compile this list, I identified all of the cases of aliens arrested and removed in the interior of the country who had been classified as non-aggravated felons or serious drug offenders with recent conviction dates and recent final removal orders, in order to capture the full extent of the new restrictions on ICE.

The effect of the order has been immediate. ICE had been planning a nationwide operation in partnership with the U.S. Marshals targeting at-large sex offenders, but it was scuttled by the new directive. According to one of my ICE sources, most of the targets do not clearly meet the new standards, especially in California, where sex offenders routinely get to plead down to far lesser charges, especially if it helps them avoid deportation, and where certain sex crimes, such as sex with a minor, are not classified as felonies as they are in other states. Another ICE officer told me that they had more than two dozen deportable sex offender targets at large in his area who now will be free to re-offend.

Besides the obvious public-safety problems that will result from permitting criminal aliens to remain, the Biden order eliminates consequences for those who have already been removed, often multiple times. According to the ICE records, more than 28,000, or 31 percent, of the nearly 92,000 cases that would no longer be removed are prior deportees.

Further analysis (see Table 2) shows that the parts of the country that will suffer the most from Biden's decimation of immigration enforcement will be the parts of the country that have been the most fully cooperative with ICE, and which used immigration enforcement most effectively as a public safety tool. These places include the states covered by the Atlanta field office (Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina), the four Texas field offices, and the New Orleans field office, (Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee).

A different set of ICE records available in the FOIA Library reveals the impact of non-enforcement by county. Using a set of records enumerating each case of an alien removed after identification upon arrest by a local law enforcement agency from 2015 to 2017, it is possible to show which U.S. counties have had the most criminal alien deportations. Table 3 is a listing of the top 30 counties for criminal arrests during this period. These are the counties that can now be expected have the most protected criminal aliens under Biden's order.

Biden's order is a reckless experiment that is bound to have a human cost. But some state leaders don't want to find out the hard way exactly what happens under a deportation moratorium. Texas already has filed a lawsuit, citing the significant costs to Texas taxpayers of dealing with illegal aliens that the federal government neglects to remove, not to mention a formal agreement Texas has with the feds to provide notice and consultation before any major policy changes.

Between this freeze on ICE and the resurgence of the caravans hoping to benefit from Biden policies, it's hard to see how anyone will have an appetite to consider the mass amnesty and legal immigration expansion that Biden hopes to accomplish.


Table 1. Top 50 Criminal Charges
of Non-Serious/Aggravated/Recent
Felony 2018 Removal Cases


Driving Under Influence Liquor10,322
Traffic Offense4,724
Assault4,676
Marijuana2,739
Illegal Entry (INA SEC.101(a)(43)(O), 8USC1325 only)2,519
Aggravated Assault2,516
Illegal Re-Entry (INA SEC.101(a)(43)(O), 8USC1326 only)2,390
Drug Trafficking2,222
Weapons Offenses2,080
Cocaine2,064
Fraud2,042
Burglary1,925
Larceny1,839
Domestic Violence1,817
Sex Assault1,478
Robbery1,355
Dangerous Drugs, Unspecified1,295
Drug Possession1,260
Public Order Crimes1,205
Amphetamine1,116
Resisting Officer932
Battery856
Hit and Run825
Sex Offense825
Homicide788
Cruelty Toward Child, Disabled, Elderly or Wife684
Disorderly Conduct655
Forgery652
Smuggling Aliens603
Flight To Avoid (prosecution, confinement, etc.)588
Heroin581
Obstruction of Justice517
Lewd or Lascivious Acts with Minor505
Liquor397
Trespassing393
Rape379
Licensing Violation374
Failure To Appear310
Kidnapping305
Probation Violation298
Identity Theft275
Shoplifting263
Narcotics Equip - Possession254
Terroristic Threats246
Possess Fraudulent Immigration Documents241
Vehicle Theft238
Damage Property237
Sexual Exploitation of Minor231
Prostitution175
Driving Under Influence Drugs165
Subtotal65,376
  
Other Crimes3,886
Total Enumerated Crimes69,262

Source: ICE.



Table 2. 2018 Interior Removal Cases Classified
as Non-Serious/Aggravated Felons,
By ICE Field Office


Field OfficeNumber
Atlanta10,344
Baltimore697
Boston1,601
Buffalo872
Chicago5,000
Dallas9,064
Denver2,244
Detroit2,410
El Paso2,107
Houston7,438
HQ6
Los Angeles5,579
Miami4,842
New Orleans7,005
New York City1,743
Newark1,557
Philadelphia2,740
Phoenix4,490
Salt Lake City2,656
San Antonio5,281
San Diego2,977
San Francisco4,226
Seattle2,615
St. Paul2,770
Washington1,729
Grand Total91,993

Source: ICE.

Note: These are cases of removed aliens identified in ICE’s FY2018 enforcement
records system that were classified as non-aggravated felons or
lesser drug offenders.



Table 3. Top 30 Counties for
Criminal Alien Arrests,
2015-2017


El Paso, Texas8,307
Reeves, Texas7,662
Maricopa, Ariz.6,560
Howard, Texas5,551
Harris, Texas5,316
Los Angeles, Calif.4,076
Hidalgo, Texas3,541
Cibola, N.M.3,450
Orange, Calif.3,199
Dallas, Texas3,174
Willacy, Texas2,577
Garza, Texas2,497
Kern, Calif.2,496
San Diego, Calif.2,493
Imperial, Calif.2,188
Pima, Ariz.2,029
Travis, Texas1,527
San Bernardino, Calif.1,409
Cameron, Texas1,368
Clark, Nev.1,360
Tarrant, Texas1,351
New York, N.Y.1,306
Concho, Texas1,224
Salt Lake, Utah1,158
Walker, Texas1,137
Webb, Texas1,108
Sacramento, Calif.982
Bexar, Texas956
Cook, Ill.881
Santa Barbara, Calif.862
Total, All Counties149,601

Source: ICE.



Biden's DHS Is Abolishing ICE Without Abolishing ICE

Officers 'now being told to enforce nothing'

By Andrew R. Arthur on February 10, 2021

The Washington Post ran an article this week captioned "New Biden rules for ICE point to fewer arrests and deportations, and a more restrained agency". That is one way of putting it. I prefer the following quote in the article, from one unnamed "distraught official": "They've abolished ICE without abolishing ICE."

I have already reported on the DHS memorandum of January 20 limiting ICE arrests to three specified "priorities": spies and terrorists; aliens who entered illegally on or after November 1; and aliens released from incarceration on or after the date of that memorandum who have been convicted of "aggravated felonies", as defined in section 101(a)(43) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).

As a fig leaf, that memorandum notes that "nothing in this memorandum prohibits the apprehension or detention of individuals unlawfully in the United States who are not identified as priorities herein." Note, however, aliens lawfully admitted who are removable, for say, sexual abuse of a minor (an aggravated felony) are not "unlawfully in the United States" until they have been ordered removed.

So, if said child molester was released from federal, state, or local custody prior to Inauguration Day, 2020, he or she is not to be arrested by ICE under the limitations in that memorandum. This is not a matter of semantics or legalese: Agents and officers know the law as well as I do, and will certainly interpret this sentence in the memorandum as I have. (See my colleague Jessica Vaughan's analysis applying the new priorities to 2018 interior removal statistics; she found that 96.5 percent of those removed would have been allowed to stay.)

The memorandum continues: "In order to ensure appropriate allocation of resources and exercise of prosecutorial discretion, the Acting Director of ICE shall issue operational guidance on the implementation of these priorities." Which brings me to the Post story.

It reports that ICE is preparing such guidelines "as the Biden administration attempts to assert more control over an agency afforded wide latitude under President Donald Trump." That is in the first line of the article, but bears more analysis.

It is not as if ICE officials had untrammeled authority to grab whomever they wanted off of the street under Trump. They could only arrest aliens whom they had concluded were removable under the INA — the law that Congress enacted and the president signed. Put another way, ICE could only arrest, detain, and remove aliens your elected representatives said that they could arrest, detain, and remove.

That is actually an overstatement, as Trump issued an executive order with his own ICE enforcement priorities, but if officers happened upon other removable aliens, they could be arrested, as well.

And, as I explained in a January 26 statistics-filled post captioned "The Canard of 'Hyper' ICE Enforcement Under Trump", ICE actually was more restrained under the 45th president than they were for the majority of President Obama's time in office. Here are two key takeaways:

  • At their peak in FY 2018, ICE interior removals were less than 42 percent of what they had been under Obama in FY 2010. Similarly, at the Trump high-water mark in FY 2018, ICE interior arrests were between 44 percent and 50 percent lower (depending on which numbers you use) than they were in FY 2011, again, under Obama.
  • Last fiscal year (FY 2020), ICE only removed 62,739 aliens from the interior — 92 percent of whom had pending criminal charges or convictions, with convicted aliens making up the bulk (77 percent). That is actually fewer interior removals than in the last full fiscal year of the Obama administration (65,332), 92 percent of whom had criminal convictions.

Those are actual statistics, not feelings, thoughts, or impressions. With due respect to DC's paper of record, if ICE had "wide latitude" under Trump, it is only when compared to the last years of the Obama administration, and they used it judiciously.

The Post reports that according to "interim instructions sent to senior officials", ICE "will no longer seek to deport immigrants for crimes such as driving under the influence and assault". In an October 2019 post, I asked the question "Are Immigration Advocates Pro-Drunk Driver?", and it appears to be an evergreen one.

Of course, as I reported last March, then-candidate Biden threatened to fire ICE officials who arrested and removed any alien who had not been convicted of a felony (more on that below), and that he did not consider "drunk driving as a felony". That was a campaign promise. The new guidelines are where the metaphorical rubber — and the literal drunk driver—meet the road.

Aliens convicted of or facing charges for DUI have been the leading category of foreign nationals who have been arrested by ICE over the last four years: ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) arrested 35,716 aliens with DUI convictions and 20,091 aliens facing charges for that offense in FY 2020; 49,106 aliens with convictions and 25,417 facing charges in FY 2019; 54,630 aliens with convictions, 26,100 with charges in FY 2018; and 59,985 aliens with convictions and 20,562 charged in FY 2017.

Why focus on them? Because they are dangers to others and themselves, and are likely to do it again.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that "[e]very day, almost 30 people in the United States die in drunk-driving crashes — that's one person every 50 minutes" — a total of 10,511 needless deaths in 2018. Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) reports that the average drunk driver has driven drunk 80 times before their first arrest, and that one-third of all of those arrested for drunk driving are repeat offenders. "Follow the science."

Under the new Biden priorities, ICE agents and officers will have to get HQ clearance before arresting any criminal alien after they have been released from custody. Note that many sanctuary jurisdictions will not give ICE the heads-up that an alien will be released, and may not allow agents and officers into their facilities. How will officers in those jurisdictions arrest even the remaining criminal aliens?

Needless to say, getting approval from Washington will be a time-consuming and often frustrating process, and it will be the rare case as a practical matter in which an alien makes the cut.

Further, as former ICE Director Ron Vitiello explained: "Clearing enforcement actions in Washington, D.C., sets a tone that Agents do not have the trust and confidence of their leadership at ICE HQ or DHS and possibly higher in the chain of command." With due respect to Chief Vitiello, it is not a tone — it is a symphony.

That said, and as the foregoing demonstrates, not even every criminal alien will be treated equally. The new policy memorandum is apparently focused on alien criminals who are "public safety threats", but its definition of that term and yours might be very different.

According to the Post, ICE will not be looking for many aliens convicted of simple assault (as noted above), "money laundering, property crimes, fraud, tax crimes, [or] solicitation", nor will it go after aliens who have been charged but not convicted as a general rule, either.

Simple assault may or may not be a ground of removal and an aggravated felony (depending on how it is defined under the applicable statute and the sentence), but offenders pose a danger to the community, and there is no reason to suffer the continued presence of an otherwise removable alien who has been convicted of the crime. In 2015, the rate of simple assault in the United States was 11.8 per thousand, meaning that the odds are good that you or someone you know have been or will be a victim.

Money laundering is an aggravated felony if the funds exceeded $10,000. More importantly, however, it is a "secondary offense", as it, in the words of the Congressional Research Service (CRS), "is commonly understood as the process of cleansing the taint from the proceeds of crime." Simply put, you don't "launder" money unless it was dirty when you got it.

"Property crimes" may be aggravated felonies, as well. Here is what the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) at DOJ has to say about such offenses: "In a property crime, a victim's property is stolen or destroyed, without the use or threat of force against the victim. Property crimes include burglary and theft as well as vandalism and arson." If you steal my stuff, or burglarize my home, you're a threat.

NIJ explains it "supports projects that strive to understand and reduce the occurrence and impact of property crimes." One sure way to reduce the impact of property crimes is to remove aliens who have committed them from the United States, because that dissuades potential offenders and takes future recidivists from the community. There's no indication that it was consulted by DHS leadership, however.

Fraud? Again, an aggravated felony if the loss is $10,000 or more (and a removable crime involving moral turpitude). AARP (whose constituency is uniquely susceptible to scams) explains that: "Overall fraud losses were more than $1.9 billion last year, up from more than $1.48 billion in 2018, for a 28 percent jump." Why would the Biden administration de-emphasize the removal of aliens for a crime that is getting worse, and costing Americans more?

Tax crimes need no explanation. Tax evasion, again, is an aggravated felony where the revenue lost to the government is $10,000. I pay my taxes, and so should you. Justice Holmes explained that "[t]axes are what we pay for civilized society." He was echoing James Madison, who stated: "The power of taxing people and their property is essential to the very existence of government."

Pro-amnesty group America's Voice asserts: "Immigrants, including those without documentation, pay billions of dollars in taxes to federal, state and local governments every year." If so, what is the problem with removing the few bad apples who don't?

And then there is solicitation. Justia explains: "Solicitation is an inchoate crime that involves seeking out another person to engage in a criminal act." That means, you are looking for someone to commit a crime with you. Why would we want people who are looking for others to help them commit a crime to remain in the community?

Even for the few remaining criminal aliens left after these exceptions, ICE had better act quickly. As per the Post: "In instances where the aggravated felony is more than 10 years old and not the reason for a recent arrest, that individual would not be considered a public safety threat" who would be amenable to ICE apprehension under the Biden rules.

Consider that for a moment. An alien convicted of murder (an aggravated felony), who came to ICE's attention 10 years and one day after that conviction as a result of an arrest for, say, DUI, would not be subject to arrest and removal, despite the fact that section 237(a)(1) of the INA states: "Any alien (including an alien crewman) in and admitted to the United States shall, upon the order of the Attorney General, be removed if the alien" has been convicted of an aggravated felony. (Emphasis added.)

It was a similar "shall" that prompted Judge Drew B. Tipton of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas to issue a temporary restraining order blocking implementation of a 100-day "pause" on most removals in the referenced January 20 DHS memorandum (as I explained on January 27).

Congress did not intend to give ICE latitude in deciding whether or not to remove criminal aliens, and this policy will likely give Texas (the plaintiff in that case) plenty of opportunities for legal challenges.

Even gang affiliates will be cut a break under the policy, according to the Post. Only aliens with "well-documented gang affiliations" will be considered public safety threats, not those who only have: "gang tattoos or records showing 'loose affiliation with gang activity'" (whatever the latter means).

Two points: First, does anybody believe that ICE was deporting too many gang members?

Second, I am fairly familiar with how gangs operate. MS-13 does not issue membership cards, and transnational criminal organizations are dependent upon confederates and affiliates to help them carry out their criminal activities.

Case in point: In the May 29 killing of 16-year-old Gabriela Alejandra Gonzalez Ardon in a rural area in northern Baltimore County, Md. (a case about which I have written extensively), the county police have charged five individuals who it believes to be "affiliated with the MS-13 gang". Would those five have otherwise made the Biden-DHS cutoff if ICE had arrested them before that murder? I don't know, but probably not.

The aforementioned "distraught official" was quoted by the Post as stating: "It literally feels like we've gone from the ability to fully enforce our immigration laws to now being told to enforce nothing." That's my take, too.


As President Joe Biden’s coronavirus bill edges closer to a vote on the House floor, Republicans, including Smith, have sounded the alarm over how little goes towards combatting the coronavirus pandemic. The legislation contains hundreds of billions in aid for state and local governments, which Republicans such as Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) have contended would unfairly punish fiscally responsible states such as Florida.

During the hearing last week, Smith noted that less than one-tenth of the coronavirus bill goes towards helping Americans get vaccinated and provide personal protective equipment (PPE):

Less than nine percent, less than nine percent of the money allocated in this bailout package goes for vaccinations, to put shots in people’s arms, to provide healthcare equipment, PPE, less than nine percent. But 90 percent of the lips moving was about crushing the virus. They want to distract you from the majority of this bailout package that are special gifts to their voters, their political allies, and their friends. Let’s say for what it is. Let’s think about this, more than a trillion dollars of money has already been appropriated in prior bipartisan covid packages. More than a trillion has been appropriated is there, there’s no need for an additional $1.9 trillion. If you count this $1.9 trillion to what’s been already spent that adds up to more than $17,000 per every American.

Smith asked rhetorically, “I would ask the Americans back home, have you got $17,000 in benefits from Congress in the last eleven months? We all know what the answer is.”

Sean Moran is a congressional reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter @SeanMoran3.



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