Administration
Freed Illegal Immigrants Charged With Violent Crimes
By Melanie Batley,
Newsmax.com
Illegal
immigrants charged with violent crimes and serious felonies were among the
hundreds of criminals the Obama administration released from jails across the
country in February 2013, newly released documents show.
According
to records obtained by USA Today, the government released inmates charged with
offenses ranging from kidnapping and sexual assault to drug trafficking, armed
assault, and homicide.
The
evidence contradicts previous assurances by the administration that the 617
criminals who were released as part of a cost-cutting exercise were low-risk
offenders charged with misdemeanors "or other criminals whose prior
conviction did not pose a violent threat to public safety," USA Today
reported.
Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) admitted to the newspaper that numerous dangerous
criminals had been released but denied direct responsibility.
"Discretionary
releases made by ICE were of low-level offenders. However, the releases
involving individuals with more significant criminal histories were, by and
large, dictated by special circumstances outside of the agency's control,"
ICE spokeswoman Gillian Christensen told USA Today.
The new
records obtained by the newspaper from a Freedom of Information Act request
outlined previously undisclosed details about the alleged crimes of specific
detainees. One person in Texas was charged with aggravated
kidnapping and sexual assault of a child.
Another
illegal immigrant from Florida was facing charges of conspiracy
to commit homicide, according to USA Today.
Two Massachusetts detainees had been charged with
aggravated assault using a weapon, while another illegal immigrant from Colorado was being held on a sexual assault
charge.
The Obama
administration released more than 2,200 illegal immigrants from jail between
Feb. 9 and March 1, 2013 , as part of an effort to cut the
number of prisoners due to the budget-sequester funding cuts. The detainees had
been awaiting deportation or immigration hearings in a court, and the
administration did not give advance notice it would be freeing them.
The
releases triggered a furor in Congress and hearings with lawmakers who grilled
then-ICE director John Morton.
According
to USA Today, Virginia GOP Rep. J. Randy Forbes asked Morton directly, "No
one on that list has been charged or convicted with murder, rape, or sexual
abuse of a minor, were they?"
Morton,
who subsequently resigned, answered, "They were not."
Former
White House spokesman Jay Carney had also described the criminals as
"low-risk, noncriminal detainees," USA Today reported.
Meanwhile,
Republican Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma
demanded a formal investigation by the inspector general.
The
internal audit, which concluded in August 2014, concluded that ICE broke the
law in releasing the criminal illegal migrants.
"It
is baffling how an agency charged with homeland security and immigration
enforcement would knowingly release hundreds of illegals with criminal
histories. In this single action, ICE undermined its own credibility, the rule
of law, and the safety of Americans and local law enforcement," Coburn
said when the audit was released.
He added,
"This report provides more evidence that our nation's immigration laws are
being flagrantly disregarded. Americans need to be assured the problems within
ICE that led to the dangerous release of illegal aliens will be fixed, and DHS
and ICE will never again violate the law by releasing known criminals into our
streets."
McCain
said it is "deeply troubling that ICE would knowingly release thousands of
undocumented immigrant detainees — many with prior criminal records — into our
streets, while publicly downplaying the danger they posed," USA Today
reported.
Ben Ferro
benferro@insideins.com
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