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ICE agents directed to generally avoid deporting military veterans and their families

The Biden administration has directed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to generally refrain from seeking the deportation of U.S. military veterans or service members and their immediate family members, according to a directive published on Tuesday.

In a May 23 memo, interim ICE head Tae Johnson instructed the agency's deportation agents to consider prior U.S. military service as a "significant mitigating factor that weighs against" placing immigrants in deportation proceedings.

If an immigrant veteran is eligible for U.S. citizenship because of his or her service, ICE officials "should generally not take civil enforcement actions against the noncitizen, absent significant aggravating factors," Johnson wrote in his directive.

Johnson said ICE will not seek to deport active-duty U.S. service members, "absent significant aggravating factors being present in the case." Any decision to place veterans or service members in deportation proceedings must be approved by top ICE officials at local offices, Johnson added.

The May 23 directive also requires ICE agents to consider refraining from issuing deportation orders against parents, spouses or children of U.S. service members or veterans, directing them to seek approval from agency leaders before taking enforcement actions against this group.

Under the new policy, ICE will need to ask all immigrants it processes whether they have served or are serving in the U.S. military, and whether they have immediate family members who are U.S. veterans or service members.

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Ivan Ocon, a Mexican veteran of the U.S. Army who was deported to Mexico in 2016, places flags in front of the border wall in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on November 4, 2021. HERIKA MARTINEZ/AFP via Getty Images

For decades, deportation agents at ICE and its now-defunct predecessor, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, have been instructed to consider military service when deciding whether to seek the deportation of an immigrant.

But a 2019 report by the Government Accountability Office, a congressional investigative agency, found that ICE did not properly track cases of veterans it deported or placed in deportation proceedings, partly because it did not require agents to ask immigrants about military service. 

In an interview Tuesday, ICE chief of staff Jason Houser said the May 23 directive is "not a total ban" on placing immigrant veterans or service members in deportation proceedings. He said the policy is designed to ensure military service is uniformly and consistently considered by ICE agents. 

"There are of course circumstances where there is still going to be potential for veterans to be removed," Houser said, confirming that a serious criminal conviction could prompt the deportation of an immigrant who served in the military.

In most cases, noncitizens must be permanent U.S. residents to join the armed services. While U.S. law places immigrant service members on an expedited path to U.S. citizenship if they meet some requirements, it also allows ICE agents to arrest and deport legal permanent residents if they are convicted of certain crimes, regardless of their military service.

Crimes that make legal permanent residents deportable include serious ones like homicide and sexual assault, as well nonviolent offenses, such as drug-related convictions.

Johnson's memo instructs ICE personnel to consider a veteran or service member's years of service, deployment in a conflict zone, wartime medals, the type of discharge, any injuries suffered in battle, post-traumatic stress disorder or sexual trauma during service, court martial proceedings and other factors when determining whether to issue a deportation order against them.

The analysis, Johnson wrote, should also consider the type of criminal convictions, the circumstances surrounding them, the sentences and "any evidence of rehabilitation."

Houser, a U.S. Navy veteran, said the new rules could help immigrant veterans and service members with criminal convictions that might have stemmed from a post-traumatic stress disorder after combat.

"I have sailors and Marines that have served with me that go through post-traumatic stress and those sorts of things. And the complexity of a home-life balance when you're in the middle of service is something that can weigh on a soldier, sailor, Marine," Houser added, saying those circumstances can lead them "on a path where they make mistakes."

Johnson's memo is the latest in a series of Biden administration policies that have narrowed the groups of immigrants subject to ICE arrest and deportation. Under President Biden, ICE ended mass worksite arrests and instructed agents to refrain from detaining certain groups, such as pregnant women and victims of serious crimes.

Current rules approved by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas last fall direct ICE agents to focus on arresting and deporting migrants who recently crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally, immigrants with serious criminal convictions and those deemed to endanger national security.

In his September 2021 memo, Mayorkas said an immigrant's military service or that of an immediate family member should prompt ICE agents to consider declining an arrest.

Republicans have strongly criticized the policies at ICE during the Biden administration, saying they interfere with the work of agents and encourage unauthorized immigration. But Biden administration officials have said they are maximizing the impact of the finite resources at their disposal to enforce immigration laws.

ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations branch "has about 6,000 officers, DOs, deportation officers," Houser said. "That's about the size of the Harris County, Texas, sheriff's department. And we want to make sure that those officers are focused on those national security, public safety threats."

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