Camilo Montoya-Galvez
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The internal DHS document that we obtained here at CBS News shows that over the past year, the second Trump administration, specifically ICE, has arrested about 400,000 individuals who are suspected of being in the country illegally.
About 40% of those 400,000 immigrants did not have any criminal record here in the U.S., meaning that they were being held solely because of civil immigration violations like living in the country without permission.
About 60% did have some kind of criminal charge or conviction, but the numbers show that most of those criminal offenses were nonviolent in nature, and only 14% included violent crimes like murder, homicide, and sexual assault.
It allows presidents to gain this extraordinary power to order the arrest, detention and removal of non-citizens ages 14 and older from countries that are deemed to be invading the U.S. or orchestrating a predatory incursion into the country.
It allows presidents to gain this extraordinary power to order the arrest, detention and removal of non-citizens ages 14 and older from countries that are deemed to be invading the U.S. or orchestrating a predatory incursion into the country.
It allows presidents to gain this extraordinary power to order the arrest, detention and removal of non-citizens ages 14 and older from countries that are deemed to be invading the U.S. or orchestrating a predatory incursion into the country.
This law would allow officials to process people subject to it without any of the due process protections outlined in U.S. immigration law, including the right to seek asylum. People would be able to be summarily detained and deported because they would be treated not as migrants facing deportation, but as enemy aliens.
This law would allow officials to process people subject to it without any of the due process protections outlined in U.S. immigration law, including the right to seek asylum. People would be able to be summarily detained and deported because they would be treated not as migrants facing deportation, but as enemy aliens.
This law would allow officials to process people subject to it without any of the due process protections outlined in U.S. immigration law, including the right to seek asylum. People would be able to be summarily detained and deported because they would be treated not as migrants facing deportation, but as enemy aliens.