2/14/2020 - Bronson Stocking Townhall.com
Elite
tactical border patrol agents from the southern border will be deployed to help
make arrests within a number of sanctuary jurisdictions, according to a new report. Local law enforcement agencies jeopardize the
public safety by refusing to hand over criminal aliens to federal immigration
authorities and by releasing criminal aliens back into the community. U.S.
Customs and Immigration Enforcement (ICE) agents must also risk their lives by
re-arresting violent criminals who were released by local agencies within
sanctuary jurisdictions.
(Via
The New York Times) The specially trained officers are being sent to cities
including Chicago and New York to boost the enforcement power of local ICE
officers, according to two officials who are familiar with the secret
operation. Additional agents are expected to be sent to San Francisco, Los
Angeles, Atlanta, Houston, Boston, New Orleans, Detroit and Newark, N.J. ...
Lawrence
Payne, a spokesman for Customs and Border Protection, confirmed the agency was
deploying 100 officers to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which
conducts arrests in the interior of the country, “in order to enhance the
integrity of the immigration system, protect public safety, and strengthen our
national security.”
The
deployment of the teams will run from February through May, according to an
email sent to Customs and Border Protection personnel, which was read to The
New York Times by one official familiar with the planning.
Among
the agents being deployed to sanctuary cities are members of the elite tactical
unit known as BORTAC, which acts essentially as the SWAT team of the Border
Patrol. With additional gear such as stun grenades and enhanced Special
Forces-type training, including sniper certification, the officers typically
conduct high-risk operations targeting individuals who are known to be violent,
many of them with extensive criminal records.
The
unit’s work often takes place in the most rugged and swelteringly hot areas of
the border. It can involve breaking into stash houses maintained by smuggling
operations that are known to be filled with drugs and weapons.
The
report notes that ICE leadership had put in the request for additional support
in helping track down known criminal aliens subject to potential removal.
According to one official, the goal of the new deployment is to increase
arrests in sanctuary jurisdictions by a minimum of 35 percent. ICE has
also been issuing immigrant subpoenas in an effort to learn basic
information from local law enforcement agencies about the criminal aliens being
released back into the community.
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