The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) launched an immigration crackdown on Wednesday in New Orleans, the latest Democratic-run city to be targeted by the Trump administration.”The men and women of DHS law enforcement have landed in The Big Easy,” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said on X, using the nickname for the Louisiana city.Noem said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)agents “will remove the worst of the worst from New Orleans, Louisiana, after the city’s sanctuary politicians have ignored the rule of law.”Sanctuary policies enacted by the local authorities in New Orleans limit the cooperation of local law enforcement with federal immigration agents.The DHS crackdown in New Orleans comes a day after President Donald Trump said he planned to send National Guard troops to the southern US city, an action he has taken previously in Los Angeles, Washington and Memphis.”We’re going to New Orleans pretty soon,” Trump said. “The governor called me. He’d like to have us go there. He’s asked for help in New Orleans and we’re going to go there in a couple of weeks.”New Orleans has a Democratic mayor but the governor of the state is a Republican.Trump has said the troops are needed in the cities to combat crime and assist with the sweeping immigration crackdown he pledged to carry out during his White House campaign.DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the New Orleans operation would target “illegal criminal aliens” wanted for “home invasion, armed robbery, grand theft auto, and rape.””Under President Trump and Secretary Noem, we are restoring law and order for the American people,” McLaughlin said in a statement.The Trump administration claims that most of the undocumented migrants swept up in the immigration crackdown have committed or are wanted for crimes.The Cato Institute, in a study published last month, said however that only five percent of those taken into ICE custody since October 1 have a violent criminal conviction and 73 percent had no criminal conviction at all.DHS contests those figures and says 70 percent of ICE arrests are of criminal illegal aliens charged or convicted of a crime in the United States.
The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) launched an immigration crackdown on Wednesday in New Orleans, the latest Democratic-run city to be targeted by the Trump administration.”The men and women of DHS law enforcement have landed in The Big Easy,” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said on X, using the nickname for the Louisiana city.Noem said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)agents “will remove the worst of the worst from New Orleans, Louisiana, after the city’s sanctuary politicians have ignored the rule of law.”Sanctuary policies enacted by the local authorities in New Orleans limit the cooperation of local law enforcement with federal immigration agents.The DHS crackdown in New Orleans comes a day after President Donald Trump said he planned to send National Guard troops to the southern US city, an action he has taken previously in Los Angeles, Washington and Memphis.”We’re going to New Orleans pretty soon,” Trump said. “The governor called me. He’d like to have us go there. He’s asked for help in New Orleans and we’re going to go there in a couple of weeks.”New Orleans has a Democratic mayor but the governor of the state is a Republican.Trump has said the troops are needed in the cities to combat crime and assist with the sweeping immigration crackdown he pledged to carry out during his White House campaign.DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the New Orleans operation would target “illegal criminal aliens” wanted for “home invasion, armed robbery, grand theft auto, and rape.””Under President Trump and Secretary Noem, we are restoring law and order for the American people,” McLaughlin said in a statement.The Trump administration claims that most of the undocumented migrants swept up in the immigration crackdown have committed or are wanted for crimes.The Cato Institute, in a study published last month, said however that only five percent of those taken into ICE custody since October 1 have a violent criminal conviction and 73 percent had no criminal conviction at all.DHS contests those figures and says 70 percent of ICE arrests are of criminal illegal aliens charged or convicted of a crime in the United States.
