Immigration agency deports highest numbers since 2014, aided by more
flights
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[December 20, 2024]
By VALERIE GONZALEZ AND ELLIOT SPAGAT
McALLEN, Texas (AP) — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported
more than 270,000 people to 192 countries over a recent 12-month period,
the highest annual tally in a decade, according to a report released
Thursday that illustrates some of the financial and operational
challenges that President-elect Donald Trump will face to carry out his
pledge of mass deportations.
ICE, the main government agency responsible for removing people in the
country illegally, had 271,484 deportations in its fiscal year ended
Sept. 30, nearly double from 142,580 in the same period a year earlier.
It was ICE's highest deportation count since 2014, when it removed
315,943 people. The highest it reached during Trump's first term in the
White House was 267,258 in 2019.
Increased deportation flights, including on weekends, and streamlined
travel procedures for people sent to Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador
fueled the increase, ICE said. The agency had its first large flight to
China in six years and also had planes stop in Albania, Angola, Egypt,
Georgia, Ghana, Guinea, India, Mauritania, Romania, Senegal, Tajikistan
and Uzbekistan.
Also Thursday, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said authorities made
46,612 arrests for crossing the border illegally from Mexico in
November, down 18% from 56,526 a month earlier and more than 80% from an
all-time high of 250,000 in December 2023. Arrests fell by half when
Mexican authorities increased enforcement within their own borders a
year ago and by half again when President Joe Biden introduced severe
asylum restrictions in June. The November numbers were the lowest since
July 2020 and indicate that a widely anticipated spike after Trump was
elected president didn't happen immediately.
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A boy looks through a border wall separating Mexico from the United
States, Nov. 26, 2024, in Tijuana, Mexico. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull,
File)
Over the 12-month period ended Sept. 30, Mexico was the most common
destination for deportees (87,298), followed by Guatemala (66,435)
and Honduras (45,923), the ICE report said. Mexico and Central
American countries are expected to continue to bear the brunt of
deportations, partly because those governments more readily accept
their respective citizens than some others and logistics are easier.
Still, ICE's detention space and staff limited its reach as the
number of people it monitors through immigration courts continued to
mushroom. The agency's enforcement and removals unit has remained
steady at around 6,000 officers over the last decade while its
caseload has roughly quadrupled to 7.6 million, up from 6.1 million
in the last year alone.
ICE detained an average of 37,700 people a day over the recent
12-month period, a number determined by congressional funding. With
detention space a potential hurdle for mass deportations, the state
of Texas is offering rural land as a staging area.
ICE made 113,431 arrests during the latest period, down 34% from
170,590 a year earlier. The agency said a need to focus resources on
the border with Mexico diverted attention from making arrests in the
country's interior.
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Spagat reported from San Diego.
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