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US Immigration Raids Sweep Cities — Most Detainees Had No Criminal Record, Data Shows

US Immigration Raids Sweep Cities — Most Detainees Had No Criminal Record, Data Shows QO4ZSQNAMNME5LBLCU5ZUL2XAI 1

A wave of recent immigration enforcement actions across major U.S. cities aimed at rounding up individuals labelled as “criminal illegal aliens” has resulted in thousands of arrests. Yet newly compiled data reveals that the majority of those detained had no prior criminal convictions — casting doubt on official claims that the raids primarily target violent offenders.


Mass Arrests, Few Convictions

Federal operations carried out in cities such as Washington D.C., Chicago, and New Orleans have seen a surge in arrests under the banner of cracking down on criminal immigrants. However, an analysis of detention data shows fewer than 30 percent of those rounded up had been previously convicted of crimes — and only a small fraction of those convictions involved violent offences. The rest were largely related to civil immigration violations such as overstayed visas or minor infractions like traffic or DUI offences.

Shift from Targeting Crime to Broad Sweeps

In cities labelled as “sanctuary” jurisdictions, the recent raids — including a new push in New Orleans — appear to go beyond law-enforcement targeting serious criminals. Instead, many detained individuals are immigrants with no criminal records, as well as people attending immigration court hearings or awaiting paperwork processing. The scale of arrests suggests enforcement is increasingly indiscriminate, drawing criticism from civil-rights advocates who warn the raids are tearing at the fabric of immigrant communities.

Consequences Beyond Deportation: Community Fear & Civil Rights Concerns

The aggressive operations have unnerved many immigrant families, with reports of even U.S. citizens being temporarily detained because agents suspected them of belonging to the targeted group. Legal experts point out that these broad sweeps — enabled by recent shifts in policy and jurisprudence — raise serious civil-rights issues, including racial profiling and lack of due process. The rush to meet arrest quotas has led to criticism that the government’s stated goal of focusing on violent criminals is being sacrificed for volume.

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