ICE's Own Figures Show Most Immigrants in Detention Pose No Threat to Public
U.S. immigration officials last year classified 51% of the 39,000 immigrants in detention as posing no risk and no threat to the public, according to a new report based on official government data.
The report comes from the National Immigrant Justice Center, a legal services advocacy organization for immigrants. It obtained the figures, along with the Immigrant Legal Resource Center (ILRC), through a Freedom of Information Act request. The report notes this is the “most comprehensive immigration detention data” made available by ICE.
The FOIA request included 10 data sets with information about detainee demographics, inspections history and contract details for more than 1,000 facilities that jail immigrants. Most of the data goes back to at least the past four years.
The data also shows that immigration officials classified another 23% of the detainees as “Level 1” threats—the lowest threat category, which typically includes nonviolent criminal convictions. Only 15% of immigrants in detention were classified with the highest threat designation.
The figures also show the “guaranteed minimum” number of detainees that various detention centers are supposed to jail.
Just last month, ICE issued a report claiming the agency “focuses its enforcement resources on individuals who pose a threat to national security, public safety and border security.” Admittedly, it has also warned that it “no longer exempts classes or categories of removable aliens from potential enforcement,” but the data still contradicts its claim that its priority is capturing hardened criminals.
“ICE’s efforts to paint the people locked up [in detention] as threats and dangerous to our community is inaccurate and dishonest,” Tara Tidwell Cullen, the author of the report, told Splinter.