During a four-day
targeted enforcement operation in Connecticut and Massachusetts that ended
Monday, February 27, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE)
Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) officers arrested 44 convicted
criminal aliens. An additional individual was arrested who had two outstanding
arrest warrants in New York and Texas . Of the 45
arrested, 40 were arrested in Connecticut and
five were arrested in Massachusetts .
Operation Threats
Against the Community commenced Feb. 24. Forty-four of the individuals taken
into custody had prior criminal convictions, including 18 aliens who had
multiple criminal convictions. Additionally, 24 of those arrested had felony
convictions. Many of these criminal aliens had prior convictions for serious or
violent crimes, such as indecent assault and battery of a child, sexual
assault, possessing and selling dangerous drugs, drunken driving and larceny
charges.
"The results
of this targeted enforcement operation underscore ERO's ongoing commitment to
public safety," said ERO Boston Field Office Director Dorothy
Herrera-Niles, who oversees ERO throughout New England .
"Because of the tireless efforts and teamwork of ERO officers — along with
our federal, state and local law enforcement partners — there are fewer
criminal aliens in our neighborhoods.”
The 45 arrests took
place in the following locations:
·
Bridgeport
·
Danbury
·
Darien
·
Derby
·
East
Hartford
·
Hamden
·
Hartford
·
Meriden
·
Naugatuck
·
New Britain
·
New Haven
·
New London
·
Shelton
·
Stamford
·
Stratford
·
Trumbull
·
Waterbury
·
Willimantic
·
Holyoke
·
Longmeadow
·
Pittsfield
·
Springfield
Numerous federal,
state and local law enforcement agencies throughout Connecticut
and Massachusetts
assisted ERO with these arrests.
Of those arrested,
there were 38 men and seven women who are nationals of the following countries:
one from Bosnia, two from Brazil, one from Canada, one from Colombia, five from
the Dominican Republic, one from El Salvador, one from England, one from
Guatemala, one from Guyana, one from Haiti, one from Honduras, 17 from Jamaica,
two from Mexico, one from Montserrat, two from Peru, one from the Philippines,
three from Poland, one from Portugal, one from Russia and one from Tanzania.
They range in ages from 21 to 57.
Forty-four of the
45 individuals were arrested administratively for being in violation of
immigration law, and all are being held in ERO custody pending immigration
removal proceedings. The individual with an outstanding warrant for their
arrest will be turned over to the New York State Police via the extradition
process.
Some of those
arrested during this operation include:
·
A national of the Dominican Republic who was convicted of the
following crimes: assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, gaming,
smuggling of U.S.
currency, knowingly receiving stolen property and malicious destruction of
property.
·
A national of El Salvador who
was convicted of the following crimes: assault and battery of a minor and
failing to register as a sex offender.
·
A national of Jamaica who was
convicted of the following crimes: carrying a weapon without a permit, risk of
injury to a minor, eight counts of the illegal discharge of a firearm and three
counts of assault on a police officer.
·
A national of Haiti who was
convicted of the following crimes: assault in the second degree, two
convictions for assault in the third degree, sale of illegal narcotics and
resisting arrest.
·
A national of Canada who was
convicted of indecent assault and battery of a minor.
·
A national of Jamaica who was
convicted of the following crimes: assault, sale and possession of controlled
substances.
"This
operation is one of the many tools that ERO uses to effectively reduce crime at
the street level in communities throughout New England ,"
added Herrera-Niles.
In November 2011,
ERO Boston conducted a similar enforcement operation that yielded 53 arrests of
convicted criminal aliens in Massachusetts .
This enforcement
action was spearheaded by ERO's Criminal Alien Program, which is responsible
for locating, arresting and removing at-large criminal aliens. The officers who
conducted the operation received substantial assistance from ERO's Law
Enforcement Support Center (LESC) located in Williston , Vt.
ERO is focused on
smart, effective immigration enforcement that targets serious criminal aliens
who present the greatest risk to the security of our communities, such as those
charged with or convicted of homicide, rape, robbery, kidnapping, major drug
offenses and threats to national security. ERO also prioritizes the arrest and
removal of those who game the immigration system including immigration
fugitives or those criminal aliens who have been previously deported and
illegally re-entered the country.
Largely as a result
of these initiatives, for three years in a row, ERO has removed more aliens
than were removed in fiscal year 2008. Overall, in FY 2011 ERO removed 396,906
individuals nationwide — the largest number in the agency's history. Of these,
nearly 55 percent or 216,698 of the people removed, were convicted of felonies
or misdemeanors — an 89 percent increase in the removal of criminals since FY
2008. This includes 1,119 aliens convicted of homicide; 5,848 aliens convicted
of sexual offenses; 44,653 aliens convicted of drug related crimes; and 35,927
aliens convicted of driving under the influence. ERO achieved similar results
with regard to other categories prioritized for removal. Ninety percent of all
ERO's removals fell into a priority category and more than two-thirds of the
other removals in 2011 were either recent border crossers or repeat immigration
violators.
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