The Criminal Alien Program: ICE’s Biggest and Least Understood Enforcement Program
Tagged: crime, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Immigration Policy CenterThe Criminal Alien Program (CAP)–a program administered by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)–is designed to screen inmates in prisons and jails, identify deportable non-citizens, and place them into deportation proceedings. However, in the years since CAP was initiated, there have been concerns about whether or not ICE is actually targeting immigrants with serious criminal records.
- CAP is the program responsible 48% of all deportable immigrants identified by ICE in FY 2009-more than the 287(g) program, Fugitive Operations, and the Office of Field Operations combined.
- A large percentage of immigrants apprehended under CAP are not criminals at all. An October 2009 DHS report found that 57 percent of immigrants identified through the CAP program in FY 2009 had no criminal convictions, up from 53 percent in FY 2008.
- In Travis County, a majority of immigrants placed under detainer were arrested for a misdemeanor as their most serious charge. In 2008, 58 percent of the detainers were placed on those charged with misdemeanors-up from 38 percent in 2007 and 34 percent in 2006.
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The Criminal Alien Program: Immigration Enforcement in Travis County, Texas (IPC Special Report, February 17, 2010)
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The Criminal Alien Program: Immigration Enforcement in Prisons and Jails (IPC Summary, February 17, 2010)
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Immigration Detainers: A Comprehensive Look (IPC Fact Check, February 17, 2010)
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Filed Under: Immigration, Press Releases, Tomás' Picks
