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http://www.businessinsider.com/mexico-preparations-for-mass-deportations-by-donald-trump-2017-2

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A man who only gave his first name of Alfonso, center, leans against a mural of a coyote at a shelter for migrants after being deported, November 14, 2016, in Tijuana, Mexico. He lived in Southern California for 16 years before being deported.



US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers deported Guadalupe García de Rayos from Phoenix to Nogales, Mexico, on Thursday.

Rayos had lived in the US for 21 years, after crossing the border when she was 14. Her lawyer said the removal was a "direct result" of Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration.

Her family and others tried to block the deportation, with one man going so far as to wrap himself around the front wheel of the van transporting her out of an ICE facility.

She was not the first person in the US deported back to Mexico. On February 8,135 deportees arrived in Mexico City, greeted by that country's president and TV cameras. Nor will she be the last.

Later on Thursday, ICE agents in Los Angeles reportedly swept upat least 100 people, spurring more protests there. In Austin, Texas, five undocumented migrants were reportedly picked up in separate, targeted raids, an unheard of total according to one local nonprofit organizer.

On Friday, the US Department of Homeland Security confirmed that ICE had raided homes and workplaces in Atlanta and the Los Angeles area, and activists said other raids had been carried out in Virginia, North Carolina, New York, Kansas, and other parts of Texas and California.

There are a little over 11 million undocumented migrants in the US, abouthalf of whom are from Mexico.

Trump said last year he would target "probably 2 million, it could be even 3 million" immigrants for deportation, and immigration orders he's signed since taking office have expanded the number of people who can be deported bybroadening the definitionof "criminal."

Trump seems intent on mounting large-scale deportations, sending many people back to Mexico. In Mexico, government officials are preparing for that influx.

Already, there has been "a meeting between federal and state authorities to deal in terms of developing a strategy on how they're going to handle the proposed Trump deportation into Mexico," Mike Vigil, a former chief of international operations for the US Drug Enforcement Administration, told Business Insider, citing conversations he'd had with a Mexican security official.

Trump's dealings with Mexico have been fraught, and some have speculated deportation will proceed similarly.

"In an environment ot tension between both countries, deportations probably won't happen in the framework of orderly repatriation programs," Mexican security analystAlejandro Hope toldTijuana-based magazine Zeta in November.

While US and Mexican officials have met, reportedlyto discuss immigration issues, it's not known if they addressed deportations.

In spite of that lack of among Mexican officials, they reportedly have a plan for how they'll handle the arrivals.

Mexican officials are "of the opinion that Trump also wants to send individuals that were born Central American through Mexico, and they opposed that," said Vigil, author of "Metal Coffins: The Blood Alliance Cartel."

"They want the United States to fly them or do whatever they have to do, but they don't want them going into or through Mexico," he said, adding:

"The other thing that they plan on doing is that once these individuals are deported into Mexico they'll concentrate them on the border for about three days, and then from there they'll bus them to their respective states so that they're not all just en masse along the border, because that would aggravate the situation."

"And then each state would be responsible for trying to get all of these individuals jobs. That way all of these deportations are not concentrated along the border states, but dispersed throughout all the Mexican states, depending on where they come from."

The Mexican government appears to have already put something like this plan into action.

When those135 deportees arrivedin Mexico City on Wednesday, President Enrique Peña Nieto told them there were job opportunities in Mexico. Each of the returnees was given a backpack with a repatriation letter, a phone card, and a bus ticket.

The effort to move deportees around the country in a orderly fashion likely comes out of a concern over security as much as one for human rights.

The US government sent a considerable number of people back to Central America in the 1990s and 2000s, and that sudden influx to weak states emerging from civil warsis credited with giving riseto transnational gangs and to the region's current instability.

A large population with few roots in Mexico and dim prospects for work could, as in Central America in the 1990s, feed the ranks of criminal organizationsthat are wreaking havocin some parts of Mexico.

"They want to disperse it," Vigil said, "so that it's not like all of a sudden Chihuahua or Baja California norte is saddled with all these mass deportations."

While the Mexican government may be able to transport deportees around the country, finding them steady employment is going to be more difficult. The Peña Nieto government has struggled to create jobs for people in already in the country, and Mexico's recent weak economic performance will likely make that a challenge going forward.

The relative purchasing power of Mexican salarieshas declined in recent years, a trend exacerbated by the peso's lackluster performance over the last few months. One of the deportees who arrived in the country this week eventold Peña Nietothat creating jobs was not enough — the salaries needed to go up too.

"It's still unclear as to what resources they're going to put forth," Vigil said of the federal government's plan. "But I think that they'll try to get a lot of jobs, primarily agricultural jobs, at least that's what the focus is right now."

In the wake of Rayos' sudden deportation, the Mexican government also warned Mexican citizens still in the US.

"The case involving Mrs. Garcia de Rayos illustrates a new reality for the Mexican community living in the United States, facing the most severe implementation of immigration control measures," Mexico's Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Friday.

Rayos deportation prompted the Mexican foreign ministerto call on the USgovernment to respect due process and human rights during the deportation process, which the ministry reiterated in its statement.

Mexican consulates "have intensified their work of protecting fellow nationals, foreseeing more severe immigration measures to be implemented by the authorities of this country, and possible violations to constitutional precepts during such operations and problems with due process."

Despite theapparent closenessof some members of the Trump administration with officials in the Peña Nieto government, the two don't seem to be on the same page on most issues.

"I don't think that the US government has really thought this out," Vigil said. "They have to have much better coordination than they're having with the Mexican government."

"How many people are deported is going to play a very key role," he said, "because if they don't have the jobs to satisfy all of these individuals, all it's going to do is feed the ranks of these cartels, which will then expand their territory throughout Mexico," he added. "And, again, that would be a disastrous situation for both Mexico and the United States."
 
http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-deportations-20170204-story.html

By giving more authority to immigration officers, Trump has put his administration on track to boost deportations more than 75% in his first full year in office. That would meet the level set in 2012, at the end of Obama’s first term, when more than 400,000 people were deported. It dropped to some 235,000 last year after illegal immigration fell and agents were given narrowed deportation targets.

The use of ICE detainers—a practice which grew under former President George. W. Bush and during Obama’s first term—as well as the number of detained people deported, plummeted in Obama’s last few years as president. In other words, ICE officials increasingly allowed arrested illegal immigrants to go free. Once ICE officials detained someone—an increasingly rare trend under Obama—they were far more likely to release that person.

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ICE issued 309,697 detainers in 2011, an all-time high. But that plummeted to 95,085 by 2015.

Indeed, though Trump has backed off his campaign call to deport all 11.1 million people estimated to be in the country illegally, he is already facing pressure from his base to go beyond his executive order and end Obama’s program that has awarded work permits to more than 750,000 people brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

At Friday’s White House briefing, Press Secretary Sean Spicer was asked when the program would be ended and permits would stop being issued.

“We've made it very clear that we'll have further updates on immigration,” Spicer said, though he did not give an update on the status of the work permits program. “... The president has made significant progress on addressing the pledge that he made to the American people regarding immigration problems that we face, and I think we're going to see more action on that in the next few weeks.”
 
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http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/obamas-deportation-policy-numbers/story?id=41715661

Obama Has Deported More People Than Any Other President

Donald Trump’s immigration plan is set to be announced later this week. And if previous comments are any indication, the Republican presidential contender said he plans to focus on deporting criminals, similar to the current strategy of the Obama administration.

"On Day One, I am going to begin swiftly removing criminal illegal immigrants from this country," he said at Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst's Roast and Ride event Saturday in Des Moines, saying he would not focus on the 11 million undocumented residents who have lived in the U.S. for a long time without incident.

Trump has not given specific details about his immigration policy plans, but is expected to explain more Wednesday.

Based on statements so far, Trump's plan to remove the undocumented immigrants who have committed crimes is similar to what President Obama declared in 2014. Here's a look at some of the numbers:

President Barack Obama has often been referred to by immigration groups as the "Deporter in Chief."
Between 2009 and 2015 his administration has removed more than 2.5 million people through immigration orders, which doesn’t include the number of people who "self-deported" or were turned away and/or returned to their home country at the border by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

According to governmental data, the Obama administration has deported more people than any other president's administration in history.
In fact, they have deported more than the sum of all the presidents of the 20th century.

President George W. Bush's administration deported just over two million during his time in office; and Obama’s numbers don’t reflect his last year in office, for which data is not yet available.

Who is being deported?
President Obama directed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to focus on criminals, not families, during his November 2014 executive action on immigration.

According to their website, "ICE has continued to increase its focus on identifying, arresting, and removing convicted criminals in prisons and jails, and also at-large arrests in the interior."

In fiscal year 2015, 91 percent of people removed from inside the U.S. were previously convicted of a crime.

The administration made the first priority "threats to national security, border security, and public safety." That includes gang members, convicted felons or charged with "aggravated felony" and anyone apprehended at the border trying to enter the country illegally.

In 2015, 81 percent, or 113,385, of the removals were the priority one removals.

Priority two includes "misdemeanants and new immigration violators."

That includes "aliens convicted of three or more misdemeanor offenses, other than minor traffic" violations, as well as those convicted of domestic violence, sexual abuse, burglary, DUIs or drug trafficking.



Who is not being deported?
With the focus on criminals and not families, the administration has moved away from those living and working in the U.S. without a criminal history.

"Felons, not families. Criminals, not children. Gang members, not a mom who’s working hard to provide for her kids. We’ll prioritize, just like law enforcement does every day," Obama said in November 2014 when announcing his executive action on immigration.

And while he tried to provide relief and a way "out of the shadows" for those without criminal histories with his immigration action, that was eventually stricken down by the Supreme Court not issuing a decision on the case, thereby upholding the lower courts action.

But by refocusing on criminals most families who are living and following the law are not targets for deportations.



What about raids against mothers and children?
Priority three for the administration is focused on those who have arrived after January 1, 2014. The administration has focused on preventing families from sending their children unaccompanied on a dangerous trek by emphasizing they will be returned.

Many of these unaccompanied children and mothers with children are fleeing violence in central America—coming from the northern triangle of Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, some of the most dangerous countries in the world.

Many of the people migrating from that area to the U.S. claim refugee status and, if they can prove real harm will result in their being returned, they are allowed to remain until their case is heard.

There are critics, however, who state that many are not getting a fair shot at claiming refugee status and are being returned too hastily.
 
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