DHS Announces Rescission of Civil Penalties for Failure-to-Depart | Immigration Jo Office – Jeongyun Jo | Page 15

DHS Announces Rescission of Civil Penalties for Failure-to-Depart

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

Office of Public Affairs

DHS Announces Rescission of Civil Penalties for Failure-to-Depart
WASHINGTON – Today (04/23/2021), at the direction of Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) rescinded two delegation orders related to the collection of civil financial penalties for noncitizens who fail to depart the U.S., stating they run counter to the agency’s best interest.

 

“There is no indication that these penalties promoted compliance with noncitizens’ departure obligations,” said Secretary Mayorkas.  “We can enforce our immigration laws without resorting to ineffective and unnecessary punitive measures.”

 

After reviewing detailed data regarding the issuance of such fines since 2018, it was clear to Secretary Mayorkas and Acting ICE Director Tae Johnson that the fines were not effective and had not meaningfully advanced the interests of the agency.  ICE intends to work with the Department of Treasury to cancel the existing debts of those who had been fined.

 

The two delegation orders—ICE Delegation No. 01-2018, Delegation of Authority to Administer and Enforce Provisions Relating to Civil Penalties for Failure to Depart, and ICE Delegation No. 006-2020, Delegation of Authority to Administer Certain Provisions Relating to Civil Penalties for Failure to Depart—delegated to certain ICE officials the authority to administer and enforce certain civil penalties for noncitizens who fail to depart.

 

Although ICE has had the authority to assess financial penalties to individuals for failing to depart for more than 20 years, the agency did not initiate enforcement of these penalties until 2018.  As of January 20, 2021, ICE ceased issuing these fines.  This formalizes the Biden Administration’s change in direction.

 

The rescission marks ICE’s latest move toward focusing its limited resources on those posing the greatest risk to national security and public safety in accordance with the current guidance on civil immigration enforcement and removal priorities, which Acting Director Johnson issued on Feb. 18, 2021.

This entry was posted in Recent News. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.


No.TitleWriterDateHit
783 DHS Announces Rescission of Civil Penalties for Failure-to-Depart webmaster 2021.04.28 222
782 DHS Announces Extension of REAL ID Full Enforcement Deadline webmaster 2021.04.27 245
781 USCIS Issues Policy Guidance on Deference to Previous Decisions webmaster 2021.04.27 185
780 DHS Announces New Guidance to Limit ICE and CBP Civil Enforcem... webmaster 2021.04.27 239
779 CBP Continues Temporary Travel Restrictions webmaster 2021.04.22 244
778 DHS Announces 22,000 Additional H-2B Visas webmaster 2021.04.20 169
777 Visa Bulletin For May 2021 webmaster 2021.04.20 151
776 F-1 Students Seeking Optional Practical Training Can Now File ... webmaster 2021.04.13 156
775 DHS Extends Form I-9 Requirement Flexibility (Effective Mar. 3... webmaster 2021.04.03 157
774 USCIS Confirms Elimination of “Blank Space” Criteria webmaster 2021.04.02 180
< Prev ... 1 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 93 ... Next >