U.S. Can't Account for 600,000
Alien Fugitives
Since 03-28-07
By BEVERLEY LUMPKIN
The Associated Press
Monday, March 26, 2007; 1:17 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/26/AR2007032600663.html
WASHINGTON -- Teams assigned to make sure foreigners ordered out of the United
States actually leave have a backlog of more than 600,000 cases and can't
accurately account for the fugitives' whereabouts, the government reported
Monday.
The report by the Homeland Security Department's inspector general found that
the effectiveness of teams assigned to find the fugitives was hampered by
"insufficient detention capacity, limitations of an immigration database and
inadequate working space."
Even though more than $204 million was allocated for 52 fugitive operations
teams since 2003, a backlog of 623,292 cases existed as of August of 2006, the
report said.
The number of illegal immigrants in the United States has been estimated at
between 11.5 million and 12 million. About 5.4 percent of them are believed to
be "fugitive aliens," those who have failed to leave the country after being
ordered out.
The inspector general found there is not enough bed space available to detain
such fugitives and that agents are hampered by an inaccurate database. Other
factors that limit the teams' effectiveness are insufficient staffing, the
report said.
Until the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, attempts to catch such fugitives were
mostly carried out by teams not exclusively devoted to the task. After the
attacks, an Absconder Apprehension Initiative was created within the Justice
Department to find, apprehend and deport such immigrants. When the Homeland
Security Department was created in March 2003, it assumed responsibility.
Plans for the new office stated that it aimed to eliminate the case backlog by
the end of 2012, although a field manual put the timetable at 2009, the report
said.
Yet "despite the efforts of the teams, the backlog of fugitive alien cases has
increased each fiscal year since the program was established in February 2002,"
the inspector general said.
But the report said the weekly field office reports sent to headquarters do not
accurately reflect what the teams have actually done. Sometimes they include
apprehensions made by other federal, state or local law enforcement agencies.
The reports might also include cases closed because of an immigrant's death,
voluntary departure from the country or being changed to legal status.
"The current reporting system does not provide a means by which managers can
assess teams' performance," the inspector general concluded. That makes it
impossible to determine if the teams are meeting their goals, the report said.