Author Topic: Deportation of illegal immigrants increases under Obama administration  (Read 927 times)

Option D

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hhahahaha id this said that obama was doing something negative then some people (im not callin names)
would have made 50 threads about it.,..but anyway
Deportation of illegal immigrants increases under Obama administration


GALLERY

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Undocumented students from around the country demand the passage of the Dream Act outside the White House, despite the threat of arrests and deportation.
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By Peter Slevin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, July 26, 2010
In a bid to remake the enforcement of federal immigration laws, the Obama administration is deporting record numbers of illegal immigrants and auditing hundreds of businesses that blithely hire undocumented workers.

THIS STORY
Record numbers being deported
Immigration enforcement under Obama
Full coverage: The immigration debate
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency expects to deport about 400,000 people this fiscal year, nearly 10 percent above the Bush administration's 2008 total and 25 percent more than were deported in 2007. The pace of company audits has roughly quadrupled since President George W. Bush's final year in office.

The effort is part of President Obama's larger project "to make our national laws actually work," as he put it in a speech this month at American University. Partly designed to entice Republicans to support comprehensive immigration reform, the mission is proving difficult and politically perilous.

Obama is drawing flak from those who contend the administration is weak on border security and from those who are disappointed he has not done more to fulfill his campaign promise to help the country's estimated 11 million illegal residents. Trying to thread a needle, the president contends enforcement -- including the deployment of fresh troops to the Mexico border -- is a necessary but insufficient solution.

Your Take: What do you think about the Obama administration's handling of immigration?
A June 30 memorandum from ICE director John Morton instructed officers to focus their "principal attention" on felons and repeat lawbreakers. The policy, influenced by a series of sometimes-heated White House meetings, also targets repeat border crossers and declares that parents caring for children or the infirm should be detained only in unusual cases.

"We're trying to put our money where our mouth is," Morton said in an interview, describing the goal as a "rational" immigration policy. "You've got to have aggressive enforcement against criminal offenders. You have to have a secure border. You have to have some integrity in the system."

Morton said the 400,000 people expected to be deported this year -- either physically removed or allowed to leave on their own power -- represent the maximum the overburdened processing, detention and immigration court system can handle.

The Obama administration has been moving away from using work-site raids to target employers. Just 765 undocumented workers have been arrested at their jobs this fiscal year, compared with 5,100 in 2008, according to Department of Homeland Security figures. Instead, officers have increased employer audits, studying the employee documentation of 2,875 companies suspected of hiring illegal workers and assessing $6.4 million in fines.

Rebranding at ICE meant to soften immigration enforcement agency's image
On the ground, a program known as Secure Communities uses the fingerprints of people in custody for other reasons to identify deportable immigrants. Morton predicts it will "overhaul the face of immigration." The administration has expanded the system to 437 jails and prisons from 14 and aims to extend it to "every law enforcement jurisdiction" by 2013.



The Secure Communities project has identified 240,000 illegal immigrants convicted of crimes, according to DHS figures. Of those, about 30,000 have been deported, including 8,600 convicted of what the agency calls "the most egregious offenses."

tonymctones

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LOL brosky 400,000 of at a minimum 10 million maximum 20 million illegals in this country is only 4% of the illegal population at best...anybody who thinks that is a good job needs to come see me b/c im giving away free slaps to the side of the head

and the 2010 forcast is supposedly going to be much less than 2009 going off the number already deported so far in this year...ill try and dig up the link i posted for 240

tonymctones

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 8)
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2010/03/dhs-corrects-report-that-overs.html

"Months after reporting that the number of illegal immigrants removed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement increased 47 percent during President Obama's first year in office, the Department of Homeland Security on Monday corrected the record, saying the actual increase in those deported and "voluntary departures" was 5 percent."[/i]

"ICE removed 387,790 in illegal immigrants in the year ending Sept. 30, 2009, compared with 369,221 in 2008 -- a 5 percent increase."

tonymctones

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 8)

from the same link

"Separately, ICE reported that as of Feb. 1, four months into fiscal 2010, total removals are running at a rate 20 percent below last year, or 17 percent lower counting only deportations"

Dos Equis

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Doh!

Parker

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How many of them are "Repeat Deportees", using diff names. How many have come back.

Option D

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8)

from the same link

"Separately, ICE reported that as of Feb. 1, four months into fiscal 2010, total removals are running at a rate 20 percent below last year, or 17 percent lower counting only deportations"

So the 2009 numbers didnt happen?

tonymctones

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So the 2009 numbers didnt happen?
im not sure what numbers youre referring to mal?

but the number of deportations did go up but not by 20% only by 5% the other 15% left voluntarily for various reasons...slowing of the economy, family etc...it had nothing to do with enforcement of our immigration policy...they originally said 20% but didnt disclose that 15% were the voluntary departures...

and the number of predicted deportations for 2010 is almost 20% than 2009