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Immigration enforcement under Trump: Fewer people caught at border, more arrested inside the U.S.

A pair of fences separates Mexico, left, and the U.S. south of San Diego.
A pair of fences separates Mexico, left, and the U.S. south of San Diego.
(Bill Wechter / AFP/Getty Images)
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Los Angeles Times

Ten months after President Trump took office, the effect of his toughened immigration policies is showing up: The number of people caught at the southwest border has declined, while arrests of immigrants inside the country surged by 40%, statistics released Tuesday showed.

The chief of Immigration and Customs Enforcement pledged a fourfold increase next year in the number of workplace immigration enforcement actions.

At a news conference, Thomas Homan, acting director of ICE, dismissed complaints from immigration advocates about the rollback of Obama administration policies that had led to a sharp drop in interior arrests.

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“It’s easy, when you go from zero to 100, you’re going to see an increase,” Homan said. “This president, like him or love him, is doing the right thing.”

Still, the stepped-up numbers are a far cry from Trump’s promise during the campaign — a massive, immediate effort to target all 11 million people living in the country illegally.

Overall, deportations were down 6% this year, from 240,255 to 226,119. One reason for that, officials said, was the steep 24% drop in border arrests.

joseph.tanfani@latimes.com

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@jtanfani

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