
White House denies Stephen Miller's alleged ‘arrest targets' for ICE agents exist
In a court filing last week, reported by The Guardian, lawyers said that although an advisor may have made the remarks, that 'no such goal has been set as a matter of policy, and no such directive has been issued to or by DHS or ICE.'
Miller told Fox News in June that agents had been set a target of a 'minimum' of 3,000 arrests a day, as well as reportedly advising officials to target community hubs, Home Depot parking lots and 7-Eleven convenience stores to find suspects, according to The Wall Street Journal.
A report in Axios also detailed a 'tense' meeting attended by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Miller in late May, in which they told senior ICE agents to supercharge arrests in order to hit the 3,000 target.
'DHS has confirmed that 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,' the court filing read.
'[The] allegation that the government maintains a policy mandating 3,000 arrests per day appears to originate from media reports quoting a White House advisor who described that figure as a 'goal' that the Administration was 'looking to set.'
'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.'
The filing added that, while enforcement of federal immigration law was 'top priority for DHS, ICE, and the Administration,' that all government enforcement activities were based on 'individualized assessments, available resources, and evolving operational priorities – not volume metrics.'
Despite this claim, the WSJ previously reported that Miller had asked top ICE officials in June if they believed it was possible to reach one million deportations by the end of the year, citing people with knowledge of the meeting.
To achieve this, he told law enforcement to 'just go out there and arrest illegal aliens,' the outlet reported.
However, such a hardline stance has been defended previously by the Trump administration, including Donald Trump 's 'border czar' Tom Homan.
Last month Homan said that although public safety threats were a priority, those who were in the country illegally were 'not off the table,' in regards to deportation. 'We're gonna enforce immigration law,' he said.

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Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Top Dem was singing Michelle Obama's praises just an hour before dismissing her on Fox News
Top Democrat Stephen A. Smith praised former First Lady Michelle Obama just one hour before he slammed her on Fox News. The ESPN star sat down with NewsNation's Chris Cuomo on Monday night when he addressed the former first lady's recent comments comparing the sports network to reality television. Smith insisted there is 'no kerfuffle' between him and Obama, as he begun singing her praises. 'She's my - she'll always be my first lady. She's the greatest first lady in American history as far as I'm concerned. I absolutely revere her,' the 57-year-old First Take star said. He then went on to question 'how legitimate of a sports fan her husband [former President Barack Obama ] is' and claimed that maybe it was 'all Barack Obama's fault because he's too smooth.' '...I mean, this brother is so smooth he's just sitting back all cool and everything while he's watching his Chicago Bulls win championships when [Michael] Jordan was there and lose every time he hasn't been there,' Smith continued. But he did not that he was 'offended as a black man when [Michelle Obama] was campaigning for Kamala Harris' and 'said that a vote for ... Trump would be a vote against us as women. 'I understand where she was coming from and obviously I voted for Kamala Harris. But my point is... everybody's got their one salient issue that they point to when it comes to voting. 'I never forgot that she said that, nor did I forget, nor appreciated how Obama was talking to black individuals in Pittsburgh when he said that to the young black men there,' Smith noted. He argued that black men 'believe that women are highly, highly capable, better than us, smarter than us, you know, more composed than us in a lot of different situations. 'So I'm like, "Where are you getting that from?"' Smith then concluded his remarks by saying he thought it was 'important to bring that up' because even though he 'didn't like that coming out of their mouths,' it was 'the only thing that I have ever disliked about Michelle Obama, because I think she's wonderful.' But just one hour later, in an interview with Fox's Sean Hannity on Monday night, Smith suggested that the former First Lady's comments comparing ESPN to the Real Housewives of Atlanta proves she leaves sports 'to her husband.' He then said: 'You can say Stephen A. Smith is lot of things and will be a lot of things. The one thing you can never say about me is that I'm going to be a housewife.' 'She was comparing reality TV to sports TV from the standpoint of watching us go at one another,' Smith began. 'Well first of all, there's no relationship because these are some of the greatest athletes on the planet earth that play professional sports - that's who we're talking about as opposed to reality TV stars that can barely act. 'Number two, when you look at what she's talking about, you also have to take into consideration that she doesn't really pay much attention to sports - evidently she leaves that to her husband. 'And when she talked about First Take, she talked us arguing with one another, hating on one another. We have a lot of love for one another on "First Take". 'We get along just fine, we have a blast - laughing, joking, having a ball, yelling at each other about sports sometimes. We're monotone in our delivery but we have a lot of fun on First Take. That's why we've been number one for 13 consecutive years - and counting. 'Number three, let me say this to the other people that were on the table with her. You can say Stephen A. Smith is lot of things and will be a lot of things. The one thing you can never say about me is that I'm going to be a housewife. There's no confusion there. Zero.' The former first lady had sparked the war of words in a recent episode of her IMO podcast. 'If I listen to ESPN for an hour, it's like watching the "Real Housewives of Atlanta,"' the former First Lady said. 'It's the same drama, and they're yelling at each other, and they don't get along, you know? I mean, Stephen A. Smith, he's just like every other talk show host.' It was then jokingly put to Obama that Smith would be a 'great Real Housewife'. The popular reality franchise details the lives of well-off women from different regions. After her comments went viral, Obama was taken to task by Smith on his YouTube show. The ESPN star urged her to invite more 'dissenting opinions' on IMO and said he was still 'salty' over Obama's comments on Trump.


The Independent
30 minutes ago
- The Independent
Greg Abbott might just have given Democrats eyeing 2028 the ‘knife fight' they needed
The Texas redistricting fight could end up being the first test of mettle for Democrats eyeing a 2028 play for the White House. With Greg Abbott, the state's Republican governor, directing lawmakers to gerrymander up to five congressional seats to add to the GOP's total, Democrats suddenly find themselves flush with political opportunity. For months, polling has shown that Democratic voters want their representatives to take on louder roles in opposition to Donald Trump. Survey after survey has shown the frustration the party's base harbors for members of leadership, frustration which boiled into rare public view earlier this year during an intra-party spat over a potential government shutdown. Now, Texas is giving Democratic governors, at the very least, an opportunity to give the voters what they want. That's why those same governors — the ones with Democratic state legislatures to back them up, that is — are lining up to threaten their own mid-decade redistricting efforts. And the list reads like a who's who of expected presidential contenders. In Illinois, New York, New Jersey and California, four of the Democratic Party's most prominent national leaders were fired up in their responses to questions this week about redistricting and their individual responses to the Texas plan to add as many as five GOP-leaning congressional seats. Adamantly backing them up was Ken Martin, the party chair who is on his own personal crusade to rebrand the Democrats' national image after the bruising 2024 cycle. 'We're not here to tie one of our hands behind our back,' Martin said in an interview with a Portland, Oregon news outlet. 'In the past, I think our party would bring a pencil to a knife fight. We're going to bring a gun to a knife fight.' He was even more explicit at a press conference with Democratic lawmakers who fled Texas to prevent the redistricting from taking place, telling reporters: "Now is not the time for one party to play by the rules while the other party has completely ignored it. They've decided to cheat, and we're going to respond in kind." The governors vowing to match any partisan redistricting committed by Texas Republicans offered similar analogies. The strongest response came from California's Gavin Newsom, who recently visited South Carolina as it is heavily speculated that he is considering a national campaign. He vowed that his state would fight 'fire with fire' and trigger its own redistricting process were Abbott to move forward in Texas. New York's Kathy Hochul, meanwhile, told reporters that she would push for ending the state's independent redistricting commission, explaining that she would no longer fight with her hand 'tied behind my back.' 'We're sick and tired of being pushed around when other states don't have the same aspirations that we always have,' the New York governor said on Monday. 'I cannot ignore that the playing field has changed dramatically, and shame on us if we ignore that fact and cling tight to the vestiges of the past. 'That era is over — Donald Trump eliminated it forever.' In Illinois, Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who is publicly harboring the escapee Democratic lawmakers from Texas, demurred on the prospect, though his office confirmed to Axios that he won't rule out his own reciprocal efforts: "Here in the state of Illinois, it is possible to redistrict -- it's not something that I want to do,' he said on Tuesday. Maryland's Wes Moore, another rising star in the party, issued a similar statement through a spokesperson on Tuesday; 'all options' are on the table. The Democratic leader of the state's House of Delegates just introduced legislation that would allow Maryland to pursue redistricting if another state did so mid-decade. In New Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy is prevented from pushing for state lawmakers to begin their own redistricting efforts under the state's constitution. But Murphy told reporters on Monday that the issue was to be a talking point in conversations with other Democratic governors. 'I suspect as the Democratic governors get together for a drink or a coffee, this will be high on the agenda,' he said, according to The New Jersey Globe. While Democrats are likely limited in the number of states where they could mount their own bids to boost congressional representation for their party, the sheer size and density of California and New York could give them an edge. In general, the issue is providing the party the 'knife fight' it was looking for. With three Texas lawmakers risking arrest by fleeing the state to break a quorum in the legislature, Democratic voters are seeing the first hints of effective, unified Democratic resistance to the second Trump era coalesce across the country. It still remains to be seen if Texas Republicans will even be successful in their push. Assuming the GOP isn't scared off by threats from Democrats, court challenges could still prevent the state's new maps from going into effect next year — or at all. Abbott, however, seems to have ignited a spark within the Democratic Party. Even Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries was vowing that his party would respond from 'coast-to-coast' to prevent his caucus from losing up to five of its members in Texas, or at the minimum respond in kind. As the Democrats' leader in the House, Jeffries' own political future is tied to his ability to protect his members and repair a somewhat fractured party leadership as he braces for a wave of primary contests in 2026. On Monday, the Democratic minority leader vowed: 'We're going to respond and respond forcefully.' 'What is going on in Texas right now in terms of this second attempt to gerrymander the map we believe violates the Voting Rights Act,' Jeffries said during a CNN interview. 'You will not see that happen in Democratic states, but you will see governors and state legislatures and, of course, Members of the House Democratic Caucus respond in kind. There is no unilateral disarmament when we're in the middle of an all-out assault by Donald Trump.'


The Independent
30 minutes ago
- The Independent
US won't seek death penalty for Mexican drug lords Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada and Rafael Caro Quintero
U.S. prosecutors said Tuesday they won't seek the death penalty in their cases against Mexican cartel kingpin Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada and Rafael Caro Quintero, the drug lord charged with orchestrating the 1985 killing of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent. Caro Quintero, 72, and Zambada, 75, have pleaded not guilty to an array of drug trafficking charges. The prosecutions are separate, but they similarly target two of Mexico's most notorious narcos. It is unclear whether taking the death penalty off the table signals any possibility of a plea deal with either or both men. Zambada's lawyer, Frank Perez, said only that the government's decision 'marks an important step toward achieving a fair and just resolution.' Prosecutors said last winter that they were having plea discussions with Zambada's lawyer. Prosecutors wouldn't comment further Tuesday after unveiling their death-penalty decision in brief letters to judges. A request for comment was sent to Caro Quintero's lawyer. The cases are unfolding in the same Brooklyn federal courthouse where infamous Sinaloa cartel co-founder Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán was tried and convicted. The Sinaloa cartel is Mexico's oldest criminal group, with various incarnations dating to the 1970s. It is a drug trafficking power player: A former Mexican cabinet member was convicted of taking bribes to help the cartel. Guzmán and Zambada built it from a regional group into a huge manufacturer and smuggler of cocaine, heroin and other illicit drugs to U.S., authorities say. While Zambada was seen as the cartel's strategist and dealmaker, prosecutors have said he also was enmeshed in its violence, at one point ordering the murder of his own nephew. Zambada avoided capture for years, until he was arrested in Texas last year, after what he has described as a kidnapping in Mexico. One of Guzmán's sons, Joaquin Guzmán Lopez, was arrested with Zambada and has pleaded not guilty in a Chicago federal court. Caro Quintero headed the Guadalajara cartel, parts of which later merged into the Sinaloa organization. The White House has called him 'one of the most evil cartel bosses in the world." Prosecutors say he is responsible for sending tons of heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana and cocaine into the U.S. and had DEA agent Enrique 'Kiki' Camarena abducted, tortured and killed as revenge for a marijuana plantation raid. The killing was dramatized in the Netflix series 'Narcos: Mexico.'