Unpublished ICE statistics reviewed by Reuters show people with criminal convictions of any type - including minor crimes - made up only a third of the 177,000 people arrested and booked into detention from October 2024 through the end of May.
Trump took office on January 20, which means the figures include 3.5 months of Biden’s presidency.
Some 62,400 people with criminal convictions were arrested by ICE and placed in detention, the figures show. The top charges were traffic offenses or immigration-related crimes, such as illegal reentry, making up 39% of the total.
DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said the administration had targeted "the worst of the worst - including gang members, murderers, and rapists."
McLaughlin said 75% of immigration arrests during Trump's first 100 days in office were of people with convictions or pending charges.
NO ONE EXEMPT
Speaking to MSNBC earlier this week, Trump’s border czar Tom Homan said ICE raids in Los Angeles focused on criminals but that non-criminals were picked up, too.
“If ICE is there and arrests that bad guy and other aliens are there, we’re going to arrest them,” Homan said.
In a
letter week to Todd Lyons, the acting director of ICE, six Hispanic Republican lawmakers led by U.S. Representative Tony Gonzales called on the Trump administration to focus enforcement on criminals.
“Every minute that we spend pursuing an individual with a clean record is a minute less that we dedicate to apprehending terrorists or cartel operatives," they wrote.
U.S. Senator Alex Padilla, a Democrat from California, was
forcibly removed from a press conference on Thursday when he tried to ask Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem a question about immigration arrests.
Padilla was pushed out of the room, shoved to the ground and handcuffed by security.
"You can only imagine what they’re doing to farm workers, to cooks, to day laborers," Padilla told a press conference after the incident.
Source: Reuters