“Operation Endgame” Adopted to Prevent Immigrants from Evading Deportation
According
to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) is adopting stricter detention policies.
In an effort to stop immigrants from evading deportation, the first step
of “Operation Endgame” is to detain immigrants as soon as judges deny their
cases and order the immigrants removed from the United States.
Presently, deportable immigrants without a criminal record remain free as
they pursue appeals or dissolve their households.
Officials report that every year tens of thousands of deportable
immigrants go underground instead of complying with final deportation verdicts.
Another
step in the strategy of Operation Endgame is to release many of the immigrants
and track them with an intensive supervision program that could include
ankle-bracelet monitors. A participant in this current pilot program, Orfa
Salazar, says she feels much freer than she did during her 10 months in
detention and hopes for more flexible supervision under the new program.
Critics
of this plan say that these measures are far from efficient and excessively
harsh. Immigration lawyers note that the stress of an asylum hearing has been
multiplied by the fear of possible immediate detention after judgment.
This fear has led to an increase in the number of petitioners who skip
their final immigration hearings.
ICE
officials stated that they did not know when these policies would be enforced on
a national level, or how the steps of the plan would fit together.
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