“ICE cannot definitively determine whether
the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program has reduced the rate at which
aliens, who were once in the program but who are no longer participating, have
absconded or been arrested for criminal acts,” the IG’s report said. On top of
that, the agency’s procedures are “not effective in determining which aliens to
release or under what conditions,” investigators said. Among the problems,
immigration officials asked illegal immigrants if they had a medical condition
that could affect their attention or release. But some officers relied simply
on the immigrant’s answers without conducting a medical evaluation, the report
said. ICE officials agreed with all of the investigator’s recommendations, and
said they are working to update their record keeping and clarify their
decisions about inmate release. “ICE will continue to assess existing data and
data collection methods with a view to more specifically identifying the
challenges that need to be overcome,” said a response by the agency. The
process for evaluating the risks of releasing illegal immigrants was changed
and updated in January 2014, and a further update is expected for July that
would “allow for more efficient processing,” officials said.
Agency leaders have ordered field offices to
re-arrest any illegal immigrant who’s committed a crime or tried to run, but
investigators said there isn’t enough money to buy beds for all the offenders.
Indeed, the program was started because ICE didn’t have the capability to
detain all the people it was tasked with tracking. There are nearly 2 million
illegal immigrants currently in the process of being removed from the U.S., the
IG said, but only 34,000 detention beds available. So instead, the agency’s
Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations decided to release some immigrants
on their own recognizance before their trial, so long as most wore an ankle
monitor with GPS tracking.
The rate at which immigrants committed a
crime or tried to run while being monitored averaged out to about 12 percent
each year between 2010 and 2012, the agency said. But in 2012, ICE changed the
way it operates the system, including stopping the monitored release of
immigrants deemed a high flight risk, or the release of criminals who’s home
countries would not take them back. Record keeping, however, did not keep up
with the changes, so law enforcement officials have little info on what parts
of the program are working and which aren’t, the IG said.
Source:http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/feb/18/ices-risk-assessment-illegal-immigrants-not-effect/
http://www.teaparty.org/feds-losing-track-illegals-84397/
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