http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/71179

 

Homeland Security Deported Less Than 3 Percent of Illegal Aliens in U.S. in
2009
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
By Penny Starr, Senior Staff Writer 




(CNSNews.com) - The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) deported 298,410
illegal aliens in fiscal 2009, only 2.98 percent of the 10 million people it
estimated were in the United States illegally.

The number of deportations in fiscal 2009 was far less than the 400,000--or
4 percent--that John Morton, assistant secretary of the Department of
Homeland Security for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), said his
agency was capable of deporting each year.
 


In a June  <http://www.ice.gov/doclib/civil_enforcement_priorities.pdf>
memorandum, Morton spelled out why ICE had to prioritize its efforts to
fulfill its mission of enforcing U.S. immigration law, including "the
apprehension, detention and removal of aliens." 
 
Morton said ICE's mission had "direct significance for our national
security, public safety, and the integrity of our border and immigration
controls." But, Morton also said ICE's ability to remove aliens was hampered
by a lack of resources.
 
"ICE ... only has resources to remove approximately 400,000 per year, less
than 4 percent of the estimated illegal alien population in the United
State," Morton said in the
<http://www.ice.gov/doclib/civil_enforcement_priorities.pdf> memo.
 
In its  <http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/cfo_afrfy2009_vol1.pdf> annual
financial report for fiscal year 2009, the DHS said it removed 298,401, or
2.98 percent of the total number of illegal aliens ICE estimates were in the
United States that year.

 

The financial report initially stated that ICE had deported 387,790 illegal
aliens but later revised the number to 298,401 after accounting showed that
89,389 of those aliens had voluntarily returned to their country of origin
rather than face deportation.
 
The revised number is explained in a footnote of the report that says:
 
"Correction: Data for FY 2009 was originally reported for 'Removing Illegal
Aliens' as 387,790 due to incorrectly including voluntary returns in the
calculation. Data for FY 2005 through FY 2008 has also been updated due to
reconciliations of prior year data. Narrative and chart updated to reflect
these changes."
 
As  <http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/69015> reported earlier by
CNSNews.com, Morton issued the memorandum as part of the Obama
administration's shift in policy at DHS to focus its enforcement efforts on
illegal aliens who have committed crimes in the United States rather than
the general illegal alien population.
 
When asked by CNSNews.com why ICE has not deported the maximum 400,000
illegal aliens the agency said it is capable of deporting, a spokesperson
said the larger number also reflects ICE's role in causing people to
voluntarily remove themselves.
 
"ICE currently has the resources to identify, apprehend and remove about
400,000 people from the country each year--including 'voluntary returns,'
individuals that ICE still expends resources to identify and apprehend, and
then ensure that they do indeed follow through on voluntarily returning to
their home countries," Gillian Brigham, spokeswoman for ICE, told
CNSNews.com.
 
"The reality is that last year ICE removed a record number of individuals
from the country--the largest in the agency's history," Brigham said. 
 
Brigham said programs such as Secure Communities and 287(g), which partner
ICE with state and local law enforcement to enforce federal immigration
laws, have helped reach those milestones.
 
She said that in fiscal year 2010, 50 percent of the illegal aliens who have
been deported thus far have been convicted of a crime in the United States.

"Absent extraordinary circumstances or the requirements of mandatory
detention, field directors should not expend detention resources on aliens
who are known to be suffering from serious physical or mental illness, or
who are disabled, elderly, pregnant, or nursing, or who demonstrate that
they are primary caretakers of children or an infirm person, or whose
detention is otherwise not in the public interest," Morton said in his memo

 



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