The Biden administration is quietly moving to introduce new policies to loosen restrictions on immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally, officials said in a post that officials say is an attempt to thwart President-elect Donald Trump's immigration crackdown and mass deportations. told the paper.
And the Big Apple will be ground zero for these changes.
The outgoing administration plans to launch an ICE Portal app in New York City starting in early December that will allow immigrants to bypass in-person check-ins at local ICE offices.
Homeland Security officials told the Post that the app makes it easier for immigrants to evade authorities, in part because its software has been proven to be flawed and unreliable. He said it would be.
Even when working properly, the new app does not check for past arrests or outstanding warrants. That's what the current system, which is tied to in-person appointments, does, officials said.
Up to 100,000 immigrants will be enrolled in the first wave of the program, officials said.
It's just one of a handful of efforts underway before Inauguration Day, including challenging a government order requiring immigrants to be electronically tracked while waiting for immigration appointments. It also includes acknowledging that.
Experts also said reversing the policy may not be as easy as Trump waving a pen, as changes could pose procedural hurdles and legal issues.
“A lot of lawsuits are filed, which may be frivolous, but it just kind of stalls what the administration wants to do,” said one DHS official.
Former acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Mark Morgan denounced the Biden administration's last-minute move as “antithetical to a peaceful transition of power.”
“This is an obstructionist transition,” Morgan said.
“What they're going to do on the last, final day is put up as many roadblocks and roadblocks as possible and try to throw as many grenades as they can on their way out.”
Morgan added that President Trump's move to repeal Biden's new policies could be delayed by court challenges. Court challenges were effective in blunting President Trump's immigration policies during his first administration.
At the New York City field office where the app will be launched, ICE is already overwhelmed by the number of illegal immigrants roaming the streets.
As of early last year, the office was already “full through October 2032” to process migrants released into the United States, according to official documents previously seen by the Post.
More than 223,000 immigrants have come to the city since the migrant crisis began, and more than 58,000 are still being cared for by taxpayers in city-funded shelters, according to a City Hall report this week. It is said that there is
Sources say the Biden administration is rolling out the app despite “significant issues” during testing of a pilot program in multiple cities.
This app does not run on Android smartphones and does not collect participants' GPS location information when used for check-in on a laptop. That means participants may be able to report from anywhere, officials said.
When used on a mobile phone, the app only shares the subject's location for 7 days.
This is in contrast to the current system, where immigrants must provide proof of current address. The database also constantly searches arrest records for immigrants anywhere in the country and flags them to ICE agents, even if they don't show up at their appointed time.
The system would allow ICE to be more aggressive with apprehended immigrants, even if they are currently in sanctuary cities like New York.
Officials say the app and current immigration tracking databases are not interconnected, making it difficult for ICE to track immigrant criminals.
“We need information that if these people don't go to court, they have absconded and a final removal order will be issued. We need that data to start looking for people,” the source said. spoke.
But that's not the only new change.
The Biden administration is also trying to circumvent loosening regulations on electronic monitoring of released immigrants, including the use of ankle bracelets, through ICE's “Detention Alternatives” program.
The proposed changes would give migrants new rights “allowing them to object to surveillance and tracking,” officials said.
Once the program is in place, immigrants will be able to “request a review at any time” and ask for minoring to be downgraded or completely ended, officials added.
“This will allow the aliens to leave the program completely,” the source said.
Under the new changes, immigrants can ask to be “lifted” from monitoring whether they are “compliant with the program,” another official said. If ICE officials deny the request, the immigrant could face a lengthy appeals process.
“What they're doing is they're creating a lot of red tape to justify what they're doing now. A lot of employees just see this and it's a big deal. I think it's strange. In most cases, they just get terminated from the program and don't have to go through an appeals process,” the source said.
ICE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
