ICE steps up “anti-gang” raids

From Aug. 11 to 16, agents arrested 42 foreign nationals in an ICE-led operation targeting street gangs in the metropolitan area of Salt Lake City, Utah. The sweep was carried out with the assistance of the US Marshals Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the US Attorney’s Office, the Salt Lake County District Attorney’s Office, the Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office and the Salt Lake City and Midvale police departments. One of the arrested immigrants was from Guatemala, one was from Honduras, three were from El Salvador and the rest were from Mexico. Of the total 42 people arrested, 10 face federal charges for reentry after deportation; one faces federal charges for illegal possession of a firearm; and 11 others are being prosecuted on state charges. The remaining 20 people were arrested on administrative immigration violations.

According to ICE, another 73 foreign national gang members were arrested over the previous weeks in similar multi-agency operations in Provo (29 arrests), Ogden (28 arrests) and St. George (16 arrests). (ICE news release, Aug. 18)

Between July 28 and Aug. 9, a total of 50 people were arrested in an ICE-led anti-gang operation through the metropolitan area of Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn. Most of the arrests were in the Twin Cities, but some were in Brooklyn Center, Brooklyn Park, Columbia Heights, Crystal, Maplewood, Richfield and West St. Paul. The sweep was conducted in partnership with the Metro Gang Strike Force with support from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), Minnesota State Patrol, Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and the police departments of Brooklyn Park and Richfield.

ICE said 35 of those arrested were gang members, seven were “gang associates” and the other eight were immigrants with no known gang affiliation who were in violation of immigration law. According to ICE, 29 Mexicans, six Hondurans, two Salvadorans and an Ecuadoran were placed in deportation proceedings, while 10 US citizens and two US permanent residents were arrested on various state and federal charges. Three people were referred to the US Attorney’s Office in Minneapolis for criminal prosecution: two for reentering the US after having been deported; one for possessing a controlled substance. (ICE news release, Aug. 14)

On July 24, ICE agents and officers from the Yonkers Narcotics and Gang Unit raided six locations in Yonkers, NY, just north of New York City. Agents arrested five people accused of belonging to three Mexican gangs. New Rochelle police, ICE agents and Westchester County Probation officers arrested another two people in New Rochelle. All were taken into federal custody. (Journal News, Westchester, July 26)

From July 22 to 24, ICE agents arrested 17 out-of-status immigrants in an operation targeting foreign-born people with alleged gang ties in Omaha, Neb., and Council Bluffs, Iowa. One arrest was made in Council Bluffs; the other 16 were in Omaha. Those arrested were 15 Mexicans, one Salvadoran and one Honduran. According to ICE, eight of those arrested are gang members and four are “gang associates.” The other five are immigrants with no known gang affiliations. Eleven of the people arrested had prior criminal convictions; three had reentered the US after having been deported. Six of the 17 were referred to the US Attorney’s Office, District of Nebraska, for possible criminal prosecution. One was referred to the US Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Iowa, for prosecution. ICE was assisted in the operation by the ATF, Nebraska State Patrol and the police departments of Omaha and Bellevue. (ICE news release, July 25)

From July 14 to 20, a total of 81 people were arrested in an ICE-led enforcement operation targeting gang members in San Diego County, Calif. The sweep was carried out by more than 20 ICE agents, assisted by officers from the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department and the Escondido Police Department. (ICE news release, July 22; North County Times, July 22) Arrests were made in Fallbrook, San Marcos, Vista, Poway, Escondido and northern San Diego, said Miguel Unzueta, special agent in charge of ICE investigations in San Diego. According to Lt. Bob Benton, spokesperson for the Escondido Police Department, 13 people were arrested in Escondido. (NCT, July 22) Some 60 officers took part in the operation in Fallbrook on July 19; 28 people were arrested. Nine were handed over to ICE for deportation, and ICE holds were placed on a few other arrestees. An additional 22 people were cited for local violations and released. (Fallbrook Village News, July 24)

According to ICE, the 81 people arrested in the San Diego County sweeps included 38 “gang members or gang associates” and 43 “criminal aliens” who were either present in the US without permission, or were legal residents whose criminal offenses made them eligible for deportation. The North County Times reported that the 43 “criminal aliens” included two US citizens who were arrested for non-immigration-related offenses. Six Mexican nationals, including one woman, have been charged in federal court for reentering the US after having been deported. Nine other people arrested during the operation are facing state prosecution. Most of those arrested were taken into custody on administrative immigration violations. (ICE news release, July 22; North County Times, July 22)

From July 13 to 16, ICE agents working with local law enforcement officers arrested 49 people in an operation targeting foreign-born gang members in the northern and northwest suburbs of Chicago, Ill. According to ICE, 47 of the 49 were gang members or associates, while two had no known gang affiliations but were present in the US without permission; 42 had criminal histories. One of the 49 was Guatemalan; the others were Mexican. Among those arrested was one permanent resident whose criminal convictions make him eligible for deportation, said ICE. Nine of those arrested had reentered the US after having been deported. ICE was assisted in the operation by the ATF; the sheriffs’ departments of Cook, Boone, DuPage and Winnebago Counties; and the police departments of Addison, Belvidere, Bensenville, Elgin, Franklin Park, Harvard, Mt. Prospect, West Chicago, Wheeling and Woodstock. (ICE news release, July 18)

From July 11 to 16, ICE agents arrested 28 immigrants in an anti-gang operation in Tulsa, Okla. Those arrested included 15 “transnational gang members” and 13 people with no known gang affiliation but who were deportable, said ICE, either because they have criminal convictions or are present in the US without permission. One of the 28 was from Nigeria, one was from El Salvador and the others were from Mexico. In addition, 17 US citizen gang members were arrested on state warrants or criminal charges and turned over to local authorities. ICE was assisted in the operation by the FBI, the Oklahoma Alcohol Beverage Law Enforcement Commission (ABLE), the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office and the Tulsa Police Department. (ICE news release, July 17)

From Immigration News Briefs, Aug. 23

See our last posts on the “gang sweeps” and the politics of immigration.

  1. as long as they get fair trials/hearings…
    …(and at risk of saying something unpopular), this is good news and it will be a great day when gang members are behind bars or deported.

    I was involved with the Sanctuary movement in the 80s. Gangsters are not Sanctuary-type refugees from brutal regimes, they are engaged in the same types of brutality as the regimes themselves. I don’t care where they come from, and the ones that are US-born should face prison sentences here rather than deportation and prison in their home countries.

    I’m in the Oakland CA area so I see, hear, and hear about the results of gang activity daily. Brutal monsters who kill for money have no place in a free society. Just because we haven’t yet dealt with the ones who currently occupy the White House, is no excuse for not dealing with the ones who lurk on street corners.