AP
October 6, 2015
The
Obama administration deported the fewest number of immigrants in the
past 12 months since 2006, according to government figures obtained by
The Associated Press.
The
figures also show that deportations of criminal immigrants have dropped
to the lowest numbers since President Barack Obama took office in 2009,
despite his pledge
to focus on finding and deporting criminals living in the country
illegally.
The
overall total of 231,000 deportations generally does not include
Mexicans who were caught at the border and quickly returned home by the
U.S. Border Patrol. The figure
does include roughly 136,700 convicted criminals deported in the last
12 months. Total deportations dropped 42 percent since 2012.
The
Homeland Security Department has not yet publicly disclosed the new
internal figures, which include month-by-month breakdowns and cover the
period between Oct. 1,
2014, and Sept. 28. The new numbers emerged as illegal immigration
continues to be sharply debated among Republican presidential
candidates, especially front-runner Donald Trump. And they come as Obama
carries out his pledge from before his 2012 re-election
to narrowly focus enforcement and slow deportations after more than a
decade of rising figures.
The
biggest surprise in the figures was the decline in criminal
deportations. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson last year directed
immigration authorities anew to
focus on finding and deporting immigrants who pose a national security
or public safety threat, those who have serious criminal records or
those who recently crossed the Mexican border. The decline suggests the
administration has been failing to find criminal
immigrants in the U.S. interior, or that fewer immigrants living in the
U.S. illegally had criminal records serious enough to justify deporting
them.
"With
the resources we have ... I'm interested in focusing on criminals and
recent illegal arrivals at the border," Johnson told Congress in April.
Roughly 11 million immigrants are thought to be living in the country illegally.
Obama
has overseen the removal of more than 2.4 million immigrants since
taking office, but deportations have been declining steadily in the last
three years. Removals
declined by more than 84,000 between the 2014 and 2015 budget years,
the largest year-over-year decline since 2012.
The
Homeland Security Department has been quick to attribute the steady
decline to changing demographics at the Mexican border, specifically the
increasing number of immigrants
from countries other than Mexico and the spike in unaccompanied
children and families caught trying to cross the border illegally in
2014. The majority of the children and tens of thousands of people
traveling as families, mostly mothers and children, came
from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.
The
Border Patrol historically sends home Mexican immigrants caught
crossing the border illegally, but U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement must fly home immigrants
from other countries. That process is more expensive, complicated and
time-consuming, especially when immigrants fight their deportation or
seek asylum in the United States.
Arrests
of border crossers from other countries also dropped this year, along
with the number of unaccompanied children and families. As of the end of
August, the Border
Patrol arrested about 130,000 immigrants from countries other than
Mexico, about 34,500 unaccompanied children and roughly 34,400 people
traveling as families.
More
than 257,000 immigrants from countries other than Mexico were
apprehended at the border during the 2014 budget year, including more
than 68,000 unaccompanied children
and tens of thousands of family members. It was the first time that
immigrants from other countries outnumbered those from Mexico.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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