Revving up the Deportation Machinery: Enforcement and Pushback Under Trump, Report in Brief

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Revving up the Deportation Machinery: Enforcement and Pushback Under Trump, Report in Brief REVVING UP THE DEPORTATION MACHINERY Enforcement and Pushback under Trump Report in Brief By Randy Capps, Muzaffar Chishti, Doris Meissner, and Michelle Mittelstadt REVVING UP THE DEPORTATION MACHINERY Enforcement and Pushback under Trump Report in Brief By Randy Capps, Muzaffar Chishti, Doris Meissner, and Michelle Mittelstadt May 2018 This Report in Brief presents the key findings of a comprehensive Migration Policy Institute (MPI) study focused on interior immigration enforcement during the Trump administration and in particular the activities of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Department of Homeland Security agency responsible for interior enforcement. Over the course of six months in 2017, MPI researchers visited 15 jurisdictions in seven states, both in locations fully cooperative with ICE and those limiting their involvement, to assess the differences in enforcement and resulting impacts. The full report provides significant detail on the policies in each of the study sites with regards to cooperation with ICE. It also offers a history of the rise of the interior immigration enforcement system that began in the mid-1990s, and explains how the system currently works and its intersection with state and local law enforcement. The report includes a detailed analysis of trends in arrests at the ICE field office level and detainers lodged and transfers to ICE from local custody for the largest counties in the United States and New York City. To read the full report, visit: www.migrationpolicy.org/research/deportation-machinery. © 2018 Migration Policy Institute. All Rights Reserved. Design and Layout: Sara Staedicke, MPI Cover Image: Josh Denmark/DHS No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Migration Policy Institute. A full-text PDF of this document is available for free download from www.migrationpolicy.org. Information for reproducing excerpts from this report can be found at www.migrationpolicy.org/about/copy.php. Inquiries can also be directed to: Permissions Department, Migration Policy Institute, 1400 16th Street, NW, Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036, or by contacting [email protected]. Suggested citation: Capps, Randy, Muzaffar Chishti, Doris Meissner, and Michelle Mittelstadt. 2018. Revving Up the Deportation Machinery: Enforcement and Pushback under Trump, Report in Brief. Washington, DC: Migration Policy Institute. Table of Contents Introduction ................................................................................................ 1 I. The Evolution of the Interior Immigration Enforcement System 2 A. Rising Enforcement in the Bush and Early Obama Administrations ...................................3 B. Narrowing Enforcement in the Late Obama Administration ...............................................3 C. Widening Enforcement in the Trump Administration ............................................................4 II. The First Year of Interior Enforcement under Trump ..................... 5 A. Expanded Priorities Result in More Arrests and Deportations ..........................................6 B. “Sanctuary” Policies Curb Enforcement ...................................................................................7 C. From ‘Collaterals’ to Courthouses: Enforcement Has Expanded and Become Unpredictable ...............................................................................................................................11 D. Expanding Detention, Reducing Discretion after Arrest .....................................................13 III. Responses by States, Localities, Consulates, and Immigrant Communities ..................................................................................... 14 A. Local Criminal Justice Policies that Limit Exposure to Arrest ..........................................14 B. Civil-Society Responses ............................................................................................................15 C. A Heightened Climate of Fear .................................................................................................17 IV. Conclusion .......................................................................................... 18 Works Cited ............................................................................................. 19 About the Authors ................................................................................... 25 MIGRATION POLICY INSTITUTE Introduction A centerpiece of Donald Trump’s bid for the presidency was a promise to strictly enforce the nation’s immigration laws, both at the border and within the country. Changes began within days of the inauguration and are reshaping the system by which removable noncitizens are arrested, detained, and deported—and could do so more dramatically in the years ahead.1 This report in brief summarizes key interior by the Trump administration. findings of a year-long Migration Policy Institute (MPI) study of immigration enforcement in the U.S. Who Was Interviewed? The report’s findings reflect MPI fieldwork across the United States and analysis of U.S. Immigration and Customs The research team conducted 122 Enforcement (ICE) administrative data. MPI researchers interviews, including meetings with visited seven of ICE’s 24 Enforcement and Removal ICE leadership in each study site and a Operations (ERO) field offices and 15 local jurisdictions, combination of local police chiefs and/ includingand resulting the fourimpacts, largest the U.S. research cities team(New visitedYork, Los locations Angeles, or sheriffs; state and local government Chicago, and Houston). To assess differences in enforcement officials; former immigration judges; involvement. immigration legal service providers; fully cooperating2 with ICE as well as those limiting their immigrant-serving community-based a Freedom of Information (See Table 1Act for request a list of on study arrests sites during and the organizations; community organizers, policies.) The researchers also analyzed ICE data obtained via advocates, and union leaders; and representatives from Mexican and first 135 days of the Trump3 administration and ICE detainers Central American consular networks. forThe the broad first picture 104 days. that emerges is of a sea change in interior enforcement from the final years of the Obama administration,policy under the when Trump ICE administration immigration activities deems every were unauthorized tightly focused immigrant on criminals, or otherwise recent border deportable crossers, andnoncitizen those with a candidate fresh removal for arrest orders. and removal.In a sharp reversal, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) The broad picture that emerges is of a sea change in interior enforcement from the final years of the Obama administration. Although the numbers deported during the Trump administration to date are well under peak levels set in earlier years, the context has changed dramatically. During the two most recent administrations, enforcement was implicitly or explicitly tied to the goal of broad immigration reform legislation—with heightened enforcement viewed as the necessary predicate to future congressional action. Today there is no such linkage. In fact, it is the opposite. The Trump administration characterizes immigrants, unauthorized and legal alike, as unwelcome and as threats to national security and to American jobs and workers. It has supported legislation that would significantly curtail legal immigration, drastically Revving Up the Deportation Machinery: Enforcement and Push- 1 backThis reportunder Trumpin brief summarizes the principal findings of the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) report by Randy. TheCapps, study Muzaf does- farnot Chishti, examine Julia changing Gelatt, enforcement Jessica Bolter, at and the Arielborder G. orRuiz rules Soto, and procedures around legal immigration admissions. (Washington, DC: MPI, 2018), www.migrationpolicy.org/research/deportation-machinery 2 The jurisdictions studied are home to about 28 percent of the U.S. unauthorized. population of 11 million. See MPI Data Hub, “Unauthorized Immigrant Population Profiles,” accessed March 15, 2018, www.migrationpolicy.org/programs/us-immigra- tion-policy-program-data-hub/unauthorized-immigrant-population-profiles 3 The first 135 days ofFreedom the Trump of Informationadministration Act span the period from January 20 – June 3, 2017. The first 104 days span the January 20 - May 4 period. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) selected those periods in providing the data sought by MPI in its (FOIA) request. Revving Up the Deportation Machinery: Enforcement and Pushback under Trump, Report in Brief 1 MIGRATION POLICY INSTITUTE reduced refugee and other humanitarian admissions, and ended various protection programs such populations. The administration’s enforcement narrative is muscular and combative, breeding a climate asof fearDeferred as an Actionenforcement for Childhood tool, a deterrent Arrivals (DACA) to future and migration, Temporary and Protected a wedge betweenStatus (TPS) immigrants for certain and the native-born population. Into appropriateways big and funding small, the for administrationthe massive expansion is pulling of as immigration many levers enforcement as it can to reorient the administration the enforcement system. At the same time, there is growing pushback on many fronts:
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