Wednesday, March 20, 2019
An ICEy Reception
All across the Department of Homeland Security, particularly
in the border control/immigration space, the signs of failure are everywhere.
Not only is Trump’s vanity wall, which actually has not begun being built –
claims of new “wall” are simply approved fixes that antedated Trump’s tenure –
but working as a Border Patrol agency or an Immigrations and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) agent has become a fiercely unpopular job.
“Shortly after taking office, the president signed an
executive order that called for the hiring of 5,000 agents. More recently, his
administration pushed a proposal that calls for 2,750 more agents, law
enforcement officers and staff. But Border Patrol can’t hire enough people to
fill jobs that were available before. Even as Congress provides funding to hire
21,370 agents, the patrol is more than 1,800 agents short of that mark.
“Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chairman of the Homeland
Security Committee, said the agency’s inability to spend its current
allotment undercuts the Trump administration's demand for more agents. ‘You
make a better argument when you say, ‘Look, we could use 5,000 more because
we’re at our cap,’ ’ he said in an interview. ‘But you’re not there.’”
Politco.com, February 10th.
Images of young children, depressed, housed in
cages and long-separated from their parents (pictured above, and it is still
happening) have been the posters for Donald Trump’s border enforcement policy,
often defying court orders and manufacturing dramatically unsubstantiated
statistics implying compliance… with overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Residents owning border-adjoining property in the reddest of
the red states are watching an unwanted military presence running roughshod
over their property, disrupting lives and ecosystems with abandon. They’re not
happy. Meanwhile, technophobe Donald Trump’s medieval castle wall philosophy,
when state-of-the-art surveillance and interdiction systems would be infinitely
more effective, is increasingly polarizing the country. “Given me a 30-foot
wall, and I’ll show you a 31-foot ladder,” is the derisive joke making its way
in northern Mexico.
Meanwhile, an autocratic president, unable to get the
appropriate elected body to vote for monetary support for a campaign platform,
seemingly suggested by madman and indicted cohort Roger Stone, simply defies a
vote in both houses of Congress and seizes the funds from money Congress
authorized for very different purposes… to build a wall that will never be
completed. Defying the American and international legal system (to which the
United States is subject), not seriously entertaining bona fide asylum seekers
(against the law, whether Americans like it or not), Trump injects further
negativity into our immigration mess. As white supremacists cheer the
President, residents brought into the United States by their undocumented
parents in their earliest years – who know no other country – are facing
deportation.
Border Patrol and ICE agents are no longer generally held in
high regard among the majority of Americans. Perhaps they can live on the
praise from Trump’s base, but life for too many agents is harder than ever;
working for Donald Trump has dropped morale to its lowest levels since these
agencies were formed. Trump’s hardline, at a time when undocumented border
crossings have been dwindling for years, seems to be creating precisely the
opposite effect. A “now or never” motivation for asylum seekers to attempt to
enter the United States has amped up that category of border crossing, and
concomitant difficulty recruiting new officers is making the job even harder.
But Homeland Security agents, ICE included, have other
functions beyond immigration. We need their services. But decreasing trust of
the overall agency has so damaged Homeland Security, now inexorably equated
with Donald Trump bully-tactics, that it has rendered these officers much less
effective. Donald’s threats, his false statistics and his defiance of Congress
and the relevant legal system, have forced many states to deny his agents
assistance across the board. The poster-state for defiance, by no means alone
in this stance, however, is California.
“They broke up an international movie piracy ring, returned
the hand of an ancient mummy to Egypt and helped arrest the world’s biggest
drug kingpin, Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman… Homeland Security Investigations, a
branch within Immigration and Customs Enforcement, focuses on combating
cross-border criminal activity and is billed as the investigative arm of the
Department of Homeland Security. While many of its investigations involve
immigrants, including some in the country illegally, many do not.
“But its connection to ICE — at a time when the agency is
under fire because of its role in deportations and enforcing President Trump’s
aggressive immigration policy — has caused friction with some law enforcement
agencies.
“In California, where a ‘sanctuary’ law , Senate Bill 54,
went into effect last year to provide protection for immigrants in the country
illegally, agents have voiced frustration over police departments pulling out
from operations — sometimes at the last moment — as well as withdrawing from
task forces and slowing down investigations.
“‘Now all of a sudden I have an agent in the street saying,
‘This police department doesn’t want to work with us because my cred says ICE,’
‘ said Joseph Macias, special agent in charge for Homeland Security Investigations
Los Angeles… Trump’s hard-line stance on illegal immigration has provoked
cities across the country to scrutinize agreements with ICE and, in some cases,
end collaborations with the agency altogether.
“‘In the realm of everything that’s going on here in the
sanctuary state with Senate Bill 54, it is absolutely making [agents’] job
harder,’ Macias said. ‘The boots on the ground, the guys that are doing the
work, they understand it. We never want to violate any of the Senate bill’s
pieces that are in there, but we want to make sure our guys are safe.’
“One HSI agent recounted an operation last year that
involved the arrest of a U.S. citizen in a narcotics investigation. Less than
an hour before the man was supposed to arrive, LAPD officers were told to stand
down, the agent said…
“The Enforcement and Removal Operations side focuses on
enforcing immigration laws. Recently during an enforcement surge in the state
of New York, ERO agents arrested 118 people for allegedly violating immigration
laws. More than 100 were convicted criminals or had criminal charges pending,
according to ICE… The confusion between the two branches is long running, and
HSI has struggled with a ‘branding problem,’ said John Sandweg, who headed ICE
under President Obama.
“‘There’s always been this perception that the ICE brand ...
has tainted HSI as an organization and impaired their ability to do their job,’
Sandweg said. ‘One of the biggest things that plagues ICE at large is how
politicized it is as a law enforcement agency, and that’s only gotten a lot
worse, obviously, in the last couple of years.’
“Under the Trump administration, HSI received a directive to
increase work site enforcement, which has played out with the arrests of
immigrants in the country illegally at places such as a slaughterhouse in
Tennessee and a trailer manufacturer in Texas.” Los Angeles Times, March 19th. Homeland
Security chief, Kirstjen Nielsen’s recent testimony before Congress, actually
attempting to justify the agency’s right to incarcerate innocent children, may
have pleased her boss, but it made her entire cabinet-level agency even more of
a global pariah.
Of all people, Donald Trump should understand the impact of
a damaged brand. Increasingly those who once paid to use the “Trump” label on
goods, services and real estate holdings are removing that name and distancing
themselves from that highly polarizing brand. Just watching the revolving door
at the White House, it is obvious to anyone who has ever run a large
organization that Donald Trump just doesn’t know how. He is unable to instill
pride in his workers, police or military, and the catchy slogans with his base
have produced very little in the way of benefits for the vast majority of
Americans. The election is not immediate, but it looms.
I’m Peter
Dekom, and as the world watches Trump’s steady popularity ratings, our stature
as a nation tumbles to the lowest level in modern history.
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