Report: Arrests of illegal immigrants jumped 32% in Trump's first months

(Immigration And Customs Enforcement)

Arrests of illegal immigrants are reportedly up by one-third in the early weeks of the Trump administration, with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) making more than 21,000 arrests.

The Washington Post reported Sunday that the total, from January 20 through mid-March, jumped 32.6 percent from the same period one year ago, when there were more than 16,000 arrests.

The report stated that most of the arrests were of convicted criminals, but noted that there were 5,441 arrests of non-criminal aliens, more than double the total from last year.

Adam Housley reported this morning that ICE detainers - requests to local authorities to hold criminal aliens - are up 75 percent, to more than 22,000.

In an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," DHS Secretary John Kelly said the definition of "criminal" has not changed, "but where on the spectrum of criminality we operate has changed."

For example, he said ICE agents may move to deport an individual with multiple DUI offenses. He said in the past, those individuals would have been "unlikely" to be deported.

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