Thursday, May 15, 2025
Beyond the Crime Scene
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
Beyond the Crime Scene
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Trump’s Mass Deportation Plans Would Carry High Costs

by
October 26, 2024
in News
0
Trump’s Mass Deportation Plans Would Carry High Costs
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


This is The Marshall Project’s Closing Argument newsletter, a weekly deep dive into a key criminal justice issue. Want this delivered to your inbox? Subscribe to future newsletters.

At a campaign rally in the border state of Arizona on Thursday, Donald Trump roused the crowd with a promise to undertake the largest mass deportation in U.S. history, after lamenting that the country has become “like a garbage can for the world.”

This promise to round up and ship off the estimated 11 million immigrants in the U.S. who lack permanent legal status is one of Trump’s signature campaign promises in 2024, and one of his biggest applause lines. Trump has privately worried that stump speeches focused on less divisive topics — say the economy — leave his audiences bored, the New York Times reported this week.

Several recent media analyses have found that a second Trump administration would face myriad challenges in affecting mass deportation at this scale, and that the effort would require a Herculean reworking of every aspect of the criminal justice and immigration detention systems.

A study by the American Immigration Council, a pro-immigration advocacy group, calculated that the deportation effort would require hundreds of new detention facilities, and hundreds of thousands of new immigration agents, judges and other staff. Fiscal analyses have concluded that mass deportation on this scale could cost hundreds of billions of dollars. Even at its current rate of enforcement, detention and deportation, Immigration and Customs Enforcement is already hindered in its “ability to maintain a safe and secure environment for staff and detainees,” at its facilities according to a Department of Homeland Security watchdog report released last month. Many of those detention locations are run by private companies on former prison grounds. Bloomberg News reports this week that Trump’s deportation plan could mean a huge financial opportunity for operators like CoreCivic and GEO Group.

To get around the already backlogged deportation system, Trump and his advisors have said they intend to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. The law — which was used during the two World Wars — allows the president to arrest, imprison or deport immigrants from a country considered an enemy of the U.S. during wartime without the usual due process. Its use would draw immediate legal challenges, and legal experts are divided over how such an effort would fare in the courts. The U.S. is not at war with any of the countries from which large numbers of migrants arrive, which the language of the act requires. Courts, however, are often deferential to the executive branch over this kind of authority.

Enforcement efforts would likely include the use of novel surveillance technology. Some tech observers worry about an increase of technology that’s already becoming ubiquitous on the border, including surveillance towers, high-tech blimps, incognito license plate readers and biometric readers.

Trump has also repeatedly said he plans to mobilize local law enforcement to carry out elements of his deportation agenda, as well as the National Guard in states where the governor is sympathetic to this goal.

Some law enforcement leaders have already declared that they will not participate in mass deportation efforts. Even officials who have raised concerns about the challenges created by large influxes of migrants are not necessarily interested in mass deportation. In Whitewater, Wisconsin, Police Chief Dan Meyer told ProPublica that he’s been irritated by efforts to politicize the situation in his town, where at least 1,000 mostly Nicaraguan migrants have recently settled.

Meyer said his department has dealt with “very real challenges tied to the arrival of so many people from another country,” mostly related to poverty, language barriers and administrative challenges — like the fact that many migrants don’t have, and struggle to get, driver’s licenses.

But what Meyer said was not happening was a migrant crime spree, a claim that’s been a cornerstone of Trump’s campaign for mass deportation. Meyer told ProPublica that the new immigrants aren’t committing crimes at a greater rate than other Whitewater residents.

In Aurora, Colorado, another police chief says that Trump’s claims don’t represent the reality on the ground. Chief Todd Chamberlain told NBC News earlier this month that the city is very safe, despite Trump describing it as “overrun” by members of the Venezuelan gang Tren De Aragua (TDA). Trump has identified Aurora as the epicenter of his deportation efforts.

Chamberlain said that there is crime related to TDA members, but that Trump’s rhetoric has dramatically overstated the situation. This week, NBC News reported that the Department of Homeland Security has identified about 600 migrants across the entire U.S. who may have connections to TDA, although some experts the outlet cited said that number was certainly an undercount.

Beyond the legal and logistical challenges of Trump’s deportation plan are profound potential economic costs. “It would certainly cause disruption and angst,” one Arkansas business leader told the New York Times, referring to the labor that migrants provide in fields that are either unattractive to U.S. workers or where there are acute shortages of homegrown labor. Some analyses suggest that a complete mass deportation could cut more than a trillion dollars of production from the U.S. economy and cause a contraction on par with the 2009 Great Recession.

None of that accounts for the human toll of mass deportations. Writing for Texas Monthly, Jack Herrera tells the story of Marco, a Honduran man in Georgia working in construction and landscaping. Marco was deported once before, in 2010, and had planned to make peace with life in Honduras. But the threat of violence by local gangs there, and the prospect of making 10 times his annual income, drew him back to the U.S. in 2021.

Like most undocumented people in the U.S., Marco lives in a mixed-status home, meaning “some relatives have citizenship or green cards and some have neither.” If Marco were deported, Herrera writes: “His family are the ones who would truly miss him — the girls waiting for their uncle to get home each sundown, with mud on his boots and wood chips on his shirt.”



Source link

Related articles

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

May 15, 2025
Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

May 15, 2025
Tags: 2024 electiondeportationImmigrant FamiliesimmigrationImmigration and Customs EnforcementImmigration Detentionmass deportationTrump AdministrationUndocumented immigrants
Share76Tweet47
Previous Post

Attorney for Menendez brothers’ uncle says DA trying to ‘rewrite history’ in pursuit to free pair

Next Post

Delphi murder suspect Richard Allen’s stepfather snores at trial: report

Related Posts

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

by
May 15, 2025
0

An Upstate New York teenager has been charged with murdering his 14-year-old girlfriend because she told him she was pregnant...

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

by
May 15, 2025
0

Crime rates aboard cruise ships leaving the US have reached a two-year high, and one expert says this creates a...

Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

by
May 15, 2025
0

By Mark Puente, The Marshall Project, and Scott Noll, News 5 Cleveland Additional reporting contributed by Brittany Hailer Nearly five...

Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he's arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he’s arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

by
May 15, 2025
0

Karma took the wheel. The serial Tesla road rage driver who landed back behind bars for allegedly assaulting a teen...

The victim was walking home around 9 a.m. Friday when the unidentified hooded gunman approached her from behind on a University Heights street and brazenly pointed the weapon without saying a word, authorities said. 

NYC woman, 32, lucky to be alive after stranger tries to shoot her from behind, missing her by ‘a centimeter’: cops

by
May 15, 2025
0

A 32-year-old Bronx woman is lucky to be alive after a stranger randomly fired a single round at the back...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

May 29, 2023
Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

September 22, 2024
Mackenzie Shirilla

Father of Mackenzie Shirilla’s boyfriend doesn’t support life sentence

August 20, 2023
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

May 9, 2023
The Murder of Latanisha Carmichael – TRUE CRIME REPORT

The Murder of Latanisha Carmichael – TRUE CRIME REPORT

June 7, 2023
The Unsolved Murder of Karina Holmer – TRUE CRIME REPORT

The Unsolved Murder of Karina Holmer – TRUE CRIME REPORT

September 3, 2023
The tragic story of solo traveler Emma Kelty

The tragic story of solo traveler Emma Kelty

May 15, 2023
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

0
Dwane Roy Dreher: photo of his 2nd wife, Lois Genzler Dreher at 16 years old

The 1955 disappearance of U.S. Navy veteran Dwane Roy Dreher

0
Alta Braun: professional photo taken when she was about 4 years old.

The 1917 unsolved murder of Alta Marie Braun

0
Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

0
Kristi Nikle: photo of suspect Floyd Tapson

The 1996 disappearance of Kristi Nikle

0
Frank and Tessie Pozar: photo of their son, Frank Pozar, Jr.

Motel Mystery: What happened to Frank and Tessie Pozar?

0
Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

0
Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

May 15, 2025
Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

May 15, 2025
Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

May 15, 2025
Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he's arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he’s arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

May 15, 2025
The victim was walking home around 9 a.m. Friday when the unidentified hooded gunman approached her from behind on a University Heights street and brazenly pointed the weapon without saying a word, authorities said. 

NYC woman, 32, lucky to be alive after stranger tries to shoot her from behind, missing her by ‘a centimeter’: cops

May 15, 2025
Maniac with 20 prior arrests busted in random attack on L.A. grandma, 70, in NYC subway station: sources

Maniac with 20 prior arrests busted in random attack on L.A. grandma, 70, in NYC subway station: sources

May 15, 2025
What's next for the Menendez brothers? Here's how soon Lyle and Erik could walk free

What’s next for the Menendez brothers? Here’s how soon Lyle and Erik could walk free

May 14, 2025
Beyond the Crime Scene with Bee Astronaut

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Podcast
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos

Legal Pages

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • DMCA

© 2023 All right reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast

© 2023 All right reserved.