ICE Breaks Agreements With States On S-Comm, Controversial Program Is Now Mandatory

Secure Communities, President Obama’s controversial federal program that has led to the deportation of noncriminal immigrants, is now mandatory, the Department of Homeland Security announced Friday afternoon.

ICE cancelled 40 agreements it signed with states under the S-Comm program.

S-Comm has been under fire for failing in it’s intent to catch serious criminals. Instead the program mostly catches noncriminal immigrants.

Homeland Security officials call the controversial program highly successful.

Oh really?

During the Obama administration, more than 77,000 immigrants convicted of crimes, including some 28,000 convicted of offenses such as murder, rape and sexual abuse of children, were deported after they were identified through S-Comm.

That sounds like a lot. Until you realize that Obama has deported a record-breaking 1 million people during his administration. By DHS’s own numbers, that leaves 895,000 people deported who were not convicted of crimes.

That doesn’t sound like a highly successful program unless you have a mass-deportation agenda. And with this news, it is becoming more obvious that that is exactly Obama’s agenda.

 

Comments
2 Responses to “ICE Breaks Agreements With States On S-Comm, Controversial Program Is Now Mandatory”
Trackbacks
Check out what others are saying...
  1. [...] the government claims, intended to deport only violent criminals who are undocumented. However, this is what the program has turned into: During the Obama administration, more than 77,000 immigrants convicted of crimes, including some [...]

  2. [...] is much more work to be done. And of course, the failing federal program S-Comm is still responsible for deporting hundreds of thousands of non-criminal [...]



Leave A Comment