Major General Michael McGuire argues on ‘Fox and Friends’ that President Biden’s open border policies could be a ‘complete disaster.’
On his first day in the Oval Office, President Biden signed a record 17 executive orders, many of them voiding commonsense policies enacted during the Trump administration.
One of the worst – and most dangerous – was his Revision of Civil Immigration Enforcement Policies and Priorities. A more apt title would be Providing Sanctuary for Criminal Aliens.
Biden’s short order revoked President Trump’s 2017 executive order on interior immigration enforcement. It’s not enough, apparently, to refrain from removing illegal aliens who commit crimes after they break into the country – the new president wants states and cities to provide such aliens sanctuary. Worse, it seems, he wants to hide their offenses and ignore their victims.
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Source: AP Photo/Gregory Bull
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is blaming California s sanctuary policies after a repeat criminal offender became the prime suspect in the murder investigation of a 35-year-old California woman.
Herbert Nixon Flores, a 46-year-old criminal alien from El Salvador, is the prime suspect in the murder of Karen Ruiz, who was shot and killed in front of the couple s three-year-old daughter. Just days after the Jan. 6 murder, Flores shot and killed himself, according to law enforcement officials. We offer our deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of Karen Ruiz, who was senselessly killed last week near her 3-year-old daughter, said Andre Quinones, ICE’s acting field office director of the Los Angeles Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO). Like so many other tragedies, this case illustrates the threat posed by the egregious and often recidivist criminal offenders our agency identifies, targets, and seeks to ap
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Source: Courtesy of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
A U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement (ICE) operation dubbed No Safe Haven is responsible for the recent arrests of 21 criminal aliens across the United States. Among the 21 arrested, 18 were foreign nationals sought in connection with suspected human rights violations or human smuggling and trafficking. Since 2014, ICE has conducted five such No Safe Haven operations targeting known and suspected human rights violators.
In the operation that concluded on Dec. 17, ICE s Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) agents in the cities of Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Newark, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Seattle, San Francisco and Salt Lake City worked with ICE s Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center and ICE s Office of the Principal Legal Advisor to make the arrests.
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Source: Courtesy of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has an ongoing national enforcement initiative dubbed Operation Broken Promise, aimed at finding and removing illegal aliens who broke their pledge to depart the United States voluntarily. On Tuesday, ICE s Removal Operations (ERO) Atlanta Field Office announced the local results of the initiative.
In Atlanta, ERO officers arrested seven individuals who failed to depart the United States as agreed. All seven illegal aliens had prior criminal convictions. The arrests were made between Dec. 7 and Dec. 17. Among those arrested were two criminal aliens from Mexico and an illegal alien from Guatemala convicted multiple times for driving under the influence.