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New US–Chile Pact Targets Criminal Migration With Biometric Technology

New US–Chile Pact Targets Criminal Migration With Biometric Technology

Epoch Times3 days ago
The United States and Chile signed a new Biometric Identification Transnational Migration Alert Program (BITMAP) letter of intent on July 30, which U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem said is a continuation of crucial information-sharing between the two nations.
'Data sharing benefits everyone – except bad actors who wish to do us and our people harm,' Noem said in a statement. 'Today, we kick-started a Biometric Identification Transnational Migration Alert Program (BITMAP) to help both nations better track criminals, terrorists, other dangerous individuals who try to cross our borders and do us harm.'
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Kristi Noem says "Alligator Alcatraz" to be model for ICE state-run detention centers
Kristi Noem says "Alligator Alcatraz" to be model for ICE state-run detention centers

CBS News

time4 hours ago

  • CBS News

Kristi Noem says "Alligator Alcatraz" to be model for ICE state-run detention centers

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem says "Alligator Alcatraz" will serve as a model for state-run migrant detention centers, and she told CBS News in an interview that she hopes to launch a handful of similar detention centers in multiple airports and jails across the country, in the coming months. Potential sites are already under consideration in Arizona, Nebraska and Louisiana. "The locations we're looking at are right by airport runways that will help give us an efficiency that we've never had before," Noem said, adding that she's appealed directly to governors and state leaders nationwide to gauge their interest in contributing to the Trump administration's program to detain and deport more unauthorized migrants. "Most of them are interested," Noem said, adding that in states that support President Trump's mission of securing the southern border, "many of them have facilities that may be empty or underutilized." The Department of Homeland Security strategy builds on the opening of a 3,000-bed immigration detention center at a jetport in South Florida last month. Dubbed Alligator Alcatraz by state and federal officials, the makeshift facility will cost an estimated $450 million to operate in its first year. Up and running in just 8 days, the tents and trailers at Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport are surrounded by 39 square miles of isolated swampland, boasting treacherous terrain and wildlife Last month, President Trump toured the facility, seeing rows of bunk beds lined up behind chain fences and encircled by razor wire. Mr. Trump joked to reporters there that "we're going to teach them how to run away from an alligator if they escape prison." Asked if the temporary facility would be a model of what's to come, the president said he'd like to see similar operations in "many states." The Arizona's governor's office told CBS News they have not been approached about a state-run facility. For her part, Noem called the Alligator Alcatraz model "much better" than the current detention prototype, which largely contracts out its Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention capacity to for-profit prison companies and county jails. ICE is an agency that falls under DHS. This model relies on intergovernmental service agreements (IGSAs) negotiated and signed between ICE and individual localities. She called the Florida facility – with an eventual price tag of $245 per inmate bed, per night, according to DHS officials – a cost-effective option. "Obviously it was much less per-bed cost than what some of the previous contracts under the Department of Homeland Security were." According to the Office of Homeland Security Statistics, the estimated average daily cost of detaining an adult migrant in fiscal year 2024 was about $165, though the actual cost of detention typically varies based on region, length of stay and facility type. Still, Noem argued that the new venues, all with close proximity to airports or runways, will help ICE to cut costs by "facilitating quick turnarounds." "They're all strategically designed to make sure that people are in beds for less days," Noem said, adding that some of the facilities being considered are still undergoing vetting by the department and subject to ongoing negotiations. "It can be much more efficient once they get their hearings, due process, paperwork." Unlike Alligator Alcatraz, which uses funds from a shelter, food and transportation program run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Noem said the state-based initiative will tap into a new $45 billion funding pool for ICE prompted by President Trump's "big, beautiful bill", which was signed into law last month. The pool of money is allocated specifically to the expansion of ICE's detention network and will nearly double the agency's bedspace capacity of 61,000 beds, based on cost analysis. As of Saturday, ICE was holding just over 57,000 individuals in its detention network in more than 150 facilities nationwide. Noem – who has implemented a department-wide policy across DHS of personally approving each and every contract and grant over $100,000 – said keeping ICE detention contracts to a duration of under five years is now "the model we've pushed for." For instance, she added, Alligator Alcatraz is a one-year contract that can be renewed. "For me personally, the question that I've asked of every one of these contracts is, why are we signing 15-year deals?" Noem said. "I have to look at our mission. If we're still building out and processing 100,000 detention beds 15 years from now, then we didn't do our job." The new policy is a departure from earlier agreements made under the Trump administration. In February, ICE signed a 15-year, $1 billion deal with the GEO Group, a private prison company, to reopen Delaney Hall, a two-story, 1,000-bed facility that ranks among the largest detention centers in the Northeast. Still, Noem said she doesn't feel the U.S. is moving away from a private detention model. "I mean, these are competitive contracts," she said. "I want everybody to be at the table, giving us solutions. I just want them to give us a contract that actually does the job – a contract that doesn't put more money in their pockets while keeping people in detention beds just for the sake of that contract." But Alligator Alcatraz has also come under fire from attorneys claiming that both the Trump and DeSantis administrations are holding detainees without charge or access to immigration courts, violating their constitutional rights. Attorneys argued in a legal filing last month that unauthorized migrants held at the Florida-run site have no legal recourse to challenge their detention. Lawyers and experts have also called into question the very legality of a state-run immigration detention center, given the federal government's authority over immigration enforcement. Opening the detention center in the Everglades under Florida's emergency state powers marked a departure from the federal government's role of housing migrant detainees, an option typically reserved for those who've recently entered the country illegally or those with criminal convictions. A U.S. district judge last week ordered state and federal officials to provide a copy of the agreement showing "who's running the show" at the Everglades immigrant-detention center. "Florida does not have the legal authority to detain undocumented immigrants in the absence of a contract with ICE," said Kevin Landy, the director of detention policy and planning for ICE under President Barack Obama. "A state government can't do that." Detainees held at Alligator Alcatraz have also claimed unsanitary and inhumane conditions, including food with maggots, denial of religious rights and limited access to both legal assistance and water. Florida officials have denied the accusations. Still, tucked away in the Florida Everglades 45 miles west of Miami, if its location sounds treacherous, Noem concedes, that's kind of the point. "There definitely is a message that it sends," the secretary said. "President Trump wants people to know if you are a violent criminal and you're in this country illegally, there will be consequences." Noem offered that deterrence is an effective strategy based on U.S. gathered intelligence "from three letter agencies, from other intelligence officials throughout the federal government and in a lot of the Latin American and South American countries" that indicates "overwhelmingly, what encourages people to go back home voluntarily is the consequences." "They see the laws being enforced in the United States," Noem said. "They know when they are here illegally and if they are detained, they'll be removed. They see that they may never get the chance to come back to America. And they're voluntarily coming home." The DHS secretary met with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum in March. "One of the questions I asked President Scheinbaum when I was in Mexico is, 'Do you have any idea how many people may have come back to Mexico that we may not know about,'" Noem said. "[Sheinbaum] said 500,000 to 600,000 people have come back to Mexico voluntarily since President Trump's been in office," Noem continued, explaining that the Mexican president believes her reluctant citizens fear losing the chance to return to the U.S. on a visa or work program. It's a datapoint she solicits from many of the foreign leaders she meets with, including Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa, who shared a 90-minute lunch with the DHS secretary in Quito, last Thursday. "I asked him the same question," Noem recalled. "He doesn't have as many illegal immigrants in the United States as in Mexico and Venezuela, but he said he thinks over 100,000 of his citizens have come back to Ecuador. And that's a huge number." Noem reasoned that her Ecuadorian counterpart's rough estimate is based on two factors – a strengthening Ecuadorian economy and a DHS television campaign launched across Latin and South America, warning prospective migrants not to enter or remain in the U.S. illegally. "He was very proud of the fact that he's doing better with his economy. So there's jobs," Noem recounted. "But he said, you know, our ads are running in Ecuador. We're telling people that, if you have family in the United States that are there illegally, it's time to come home."Margaret Brennan and Camilo Montoya-Galvez contributed to this report.

Green Card Applicant Arrested By ICE While Driving To Grocery Store
Green Card Applicant Arrested By ICE While Driving To Grocery Store

Newsweek

time5 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Green Card Applicant Arrested By ICE While Driving To Grocery Store

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A Los Angeles doctor has told how she watched on FaceTime as her husband, a Tunisian musician with a pending green card application, was arrested by federal immigration agents on what she called "probably the worst day of my life." Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents pulled over Rami Othmane while he was driving to a grocery store in Pasadena on July 13 and pulled out the paperwork he was carrying, the Associated Press (AP) reported. His wife, Dr. Wafaa Alrashid, who is a U.S. citizen and chief medical officer at Huntington Hospital, told the AP she watched events unfold over the video call, "They didn't care, they said, 'Please step out of the car," she recalled. Alrashid said her husband has since been subjected to "inhumane treatment." The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told California news station KABC in a statement that detainees recieve "proper meals, medical treatment, and have opportunities to communicate with lawyers and their family members." Newsweek contacted the family via GoFundMe and the DHS via email for comment outside of office hours on Monday. Why It Matters Dr. Wafaa Alrashid, center, whose husband, Rami Othmane, a Tunisian musician, is detained at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility, holds a sign during a rally outside the facility in Los Angeles Friday, July... Dr. Wafaa Alrashid, center, whose husband, Rami Othmane, a Tunisian musician, is detained at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility, holds a sign during a rally outside the facility in Los Angeles Friday, July 25, 2025. More Jae C. Hong/AP The administration is pushing forward with plans to carry out widespread deportations as part of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. In addition to people living in the country without legal status, immigrants with valid documentation, including green cards and visas, have been detained. Newsweek has documented dozens of cases involving green card holders and applicants who were swept up in the ICE raids. What To Know Alrashid told the AP her husband has lived in the U.S. since 2015, and though he overstayed his initial visa, a deportation order against him was dismissed in 2020. They married in March 2025 and Othmane promptly filed for his green card, Alrashid said. On learning her husband had been stopped, Alrashid got into her car and tracked his location on her phone, the AP reported. She reached the scene just in time to catch a glimpse of the outline of his head through the back window of a vehicle as it drove away, the agency said. "Agents blocked his car, did not show a warrant and did not identify themselves," Othmane's family said in a GoFundMe set up to raise financial support. The family said Othmane suffers from chronic pain and has an untreated tumor. Othmane remains in federal custody at an immigration detention facility in Arizona. "When they took him, he was wearing shorts and a t-shirt and flip-flops," Alrashid told a rally of fellow musicians, immigration advocates and activists outside the facility more than a week after his arrest. "So he was freezing. Also, there are no beds, no pillows, no blankets, no soap, No toothbrushes and toothpaste. And when you're in a room with people, bathrooms open, there's no door. So it's very dehumanizing, it's undignifying, the food is not great either." What People Are Saying Dr. Wafaa Alrashid wrote in a post on GoFundMe: "This is not just an immigration issue—this is a human rights crisis happening in downtown Los Angeles. My husband has been subjected to 12 days of inhumane treatment in a federal building. He is not a criminal. He is a kind, peaceful man with an open immigration petition. He should be with his family, not sleeping on a concrete floor without medical care." The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement to KABC: "Any allegations that detainees are not receiving medical care or conditions are "inhumane" are FALSE. All detainees are provided with proper meals, medical treatment, and have opportunities to communicate with lawyers and their family members." What Happens Next Othmane will remain in ICE custody, pending further removal proceedings.

Trump's Deportation Quota Comes Under Scrutiny
Trump's Deportation Quota Comes Under Scrutiny

Newsweek

time6 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Trump's Deportation Quota Comes Under Scrutiny

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Attorneys for the Trump administration have denied that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents were directed to meet a daily quota for arrests or deportations. In a court filing submitted on Friday, lawyers for the Department of Justice (DOJ) said "neither ICE leadership nor its field offices have been directed to meet any numerical quota or target for arrests, detentions, removals, field encounters, or any other operational activities that ICE or its components undertake in the course of enforcing federal immigration law." Newsweek has contacted the DOJ and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for comment. Agents survey migrants coming for their hearings at an immigration court in New York. Agents survey migrants coming for their hearings at an immigration court in New York. Andrea Renault/STAR MAX/IPx Why It Matters White House officials have previously referenced a daily goal of at least 3,000 arrests. President Donald Trump has ordered his administration to remove millions of migrants without legal status to fulfill his campaign pledge of mass deportations. The Republicans' hard-line immigration policy has raised concerns over racial profiling from immigrant rights advocates. What To Know In May, Axios reported that Trump aide Stephen Miller and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem were pressuring ICE to increase daily immigration arrests to three times the number recorded at the beginning of Trump's presidency, signaling a shift toward a more aggressive enforcement strategy. Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff for policy and a homeland security adviser, told Fox News host Sean Hannity at the time that the agency was looking to hit 3,000 ICE arrests per day. In the government's filing on Friday, attorneys said claims of a policy mandating 3,000 immigration arrests per day appeared to stem from media reports quoting a White House adviser, who characterized the number as a "goal" the administration was "looking to set" rather than an official directive or mandate. "That quotation may have been accurate, but no such goal has been set as a matter of policy, and no such directive has been issued to or by DHS or ICE," attorneys wrote in court filings. The filing is part of an ongoing lawsuit in Southern California, where immigrant advocacy organizations have accused the Trump administration of carrying out unconstitutional immigration enforcement operations in the Los Angeles area. When federal judges sought clarification about that number last week, the administration denied the existence of any quota. This denial contradicted claims made in a lawsuit alleging that the high pressure to meet arrest targets led ICE to carry out unlawful raids in Los Angeles. During the July 28 appeal hearing, Judge Ronald M. Gould pressed Department of Justice attorney Jacob Roth to explain the origin of the reported 3,000 daily arrest target, asking whether it came from ICE, the president or another official, Los Angeles Daily News reported. Roth said he was not aware of any such policy, according to the outlet. There were about 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States as of 2022, according to Pew Research Center. Trump has vowed to deport 1 million people in a year. What People Are Saying White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller told Hannity in May: "We are looking to set a goal of a minimum of 3,000 arrests for ICE every day and President Trump is going to keep pushing to get that number up higher each and every single day so we can get all of the Biden illegals that were flooded into our country for four years out of our country." Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for DHS, said in a statement: "Secretary Noem unleashed ICE to target the worst of the worst and carry out the largest deportation operation of criminal aliens in American history." Department of Justice attorney Jacob Roth wrote in a letter to the court: "Enforcement activity is firmly anchored in binding legal constraints—constitutional, statutory, and regulatory requirements that apply at every stage, from identification to arrest to custody—with multiple layers of supervisory review to ensure compliance with the law. This framework, not anonymous reports in the newspapers, governs ICE's operations." What Happens Next A ruling is expected in the coming months as the court weighs the scope of ICE's enforcement authority.

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