According to Kamala, It's Everyone Else's Fault
What This FL State Attorney Said About Indecent Exposure Is Beyond Baffling
What This C-SPAN Host Did on Live TV Regarding James Comey's Indictment Deserves...
North Korea Is Only One Step Away From Developing Nukes That Could Hit...
Wisconsin Beer Company Keeps Brewing Up Partisan Hatred
Vice President Vance Skewers Bud Light Troll: Conservatives Boycott, The Left Excuses Viol...
Republican Bill Berrien Drops Out of the Race for Wisconsin Governor
It Gets Worse: What We Know About the Drunk Driver Who Hit Idaho...
WI State Senate Hearing Devolves Into Chaos As Tim Carpenter Demands Healthcare for...
Liberal College Professor Sponsors TPUSA Chapter, Defends Free Marketplace of Ideas
Secret Service Seized 16 Skimmers in Boston, Halted $16.7M of EBT Fraud
California Man Sentenced to Nearly 20 Years for Firebombing UC Berkeley, Federal Building
Woman Defrauded Autism Program of $14M, Bought Real Estate in Kenya With Taxpayer...
6-3 Supreme Court Ruling Backs Trump, Halts Billions in Foreign Spending
This Texas Pharmacy Pushed 500,000 Opioid Pills—Now They're Going to Prison
Tipsheet
Premium

ICE Operation Focused on Human Rights Violators Nets 21 Arrests

Courtesy of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement

A U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement (ICE) operation dubbed "No Safe Haven" is responsible for the recent arrests of 21 criminal aliens across the United States. Among the 21 arrested, 18 were foreign nationals sought in connection with suspected human rights violations or human smuggling and trafficking. Since 2014, ICE has conducted five such "No Safe Haven" operations targeting known and suspected human rights violators.

In the operation that concluded on Dec. 17, ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) agents in the cities of Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Newark, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Seattle, San Francisco and Salt Lake City worked with ICE's Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center and ICE's Office of the Principal Legal Advisor to make the arrests.

According to ICE, all arrested foreign nationals have outstanding removal orders and are subject to repatriation in their countries of origin. Eleven foreign nationals are either known or suspected human rights violators. Nine are criminal aliens with convictions that include human smuggling, human trafficking, negligent manslaughter, and weapons offenses. Seven are affiliated with human trafficking or smuggling, and three are collateral arrests made of those with final orders of removal.

The arrests include seven foreign nationals from Central and South America implicated in numerous human rights violations, including arbitrary detentions, referrals of prisoners to intelligence units involved in persecutory abuses and direct interrogations involving the mistreatment of civilians. The arrests also include seven foreign nationals arrested or convicted for smuggling or trafficking violations, including state charges involving the solicitation to commit smuggling, smuggling of human beings for profit or commercial purpose and trafficking a person for sexual servitude. Also included are three foreign nationals from Africa implicated in ethnic cleansing, abductions and sexual exploitation of women and children.

"These arrests are a critical piece of our ongoing mission to ensure that those who violate human rights abroad or engage in human smuggling and trafficking cannot abuse the immigration system to find safe haven here in the United States," said Tony H. Pham, Senior Official Performing the Duties of Director. "We are committed to investigating and bringing these criminals to justice. We want those who have fled their countries in search of safety in the U.S. to know that they won’t come face to face with their persecutors here nor will we tolerate the smuggling, trafficking, or servitude of others."

ICE's Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center is tasked with investigating human rights violators evading justice in the United States. Such individuals may have participated in war crimes, genocide, torture, extrajudicial killings, severe violations of religious freedom, female genital mutilation/cutting and the use or recruitment of child soldiers. Such individuals may use fraudulent identities or falsified documents to evade capture. 

In June, ICE agents arrested a man accused of torturing individuals in the Republic of The Gambia, a small country in West Africa.

ICE is currently working on more than 155 active investigations of suspected human rights violations. Additionally, the agency is pursuing more than 1,675 leads and removal cases that involve suspected human rights violators from more than 90 countries.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement