Immigration agents in Minnesota and surrounding states arrested considerably more people during the Trump administration's first couple of months than in early 2015 and 2016. But arrests remained in line with those earlier in Obama's second term.
After months of speculation about how much the new government had picked up the pace of immigration arrests and deportations, new data from Immigration and Customs Enforcement offers an early glimpse. From the inauguration through mid-March, agents working out of ICE's St. Paul office, which also covers the Dakotas, Iowa and Nebraska, arrested more than 620 immigrants — up roughly 80 percent over the same period last year.
Immigrant advocates highlighted the increased percentage of immigrants without criminal convictions: about a quarter of those arrested locally, compared with 10 percent in 2016. That increase reflects a return to a more traditional enforcement approach, ICE said.
"Being in the country illegally is a crime," said Shawn Neudauer, a St. Paul-based spokesman for the agency. "We don't target people who don't have criminal records, but we can't ignore them either."
Deportations, however, did not increase nationally. Deporting most immigrants takes time, especially with an immigration court system facing staggering backlogs. In the Twin Cities, a shorthanded court with more than 5,000 cases in the pipeline will get some relief in June when a new immigration judge is slated to begin hearing cases.
ICE data also showed the local office made much more use of so-called detainers, requests that local jails keep inmates until ICE agents can take them. It wasn't clear how many requests were honored by local authorities.
Shift in priorities
Immigration arrests in the early weeks of the Trump administration increased more dramatically in this region than nationwide. The 21,360 national arrests were up roughly 30 percent over the same period last year, and lower than early 2014.
Late that year, the Obama administration revised deportation priorities to focus on immigrants with felony or multiple misdemeanor convictions and recent border crossers. Afterward, arrests and deportations fell sharply.