How Trump's illegal immigrant registry will make it easier for ICE to round up millions more migrants
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President Trump’s proposal to mandate the registration of identity for all undocumented migrants is expected to expose millions of immigrants to the risk of being targeted in the extensive deportation campaign. According to sources and experts consulted by The Post, a significant portion of immigrants is unlikely to comply with this requirement.

Non-compliance with the registration could facilitate the task of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in apprehending individuals who unlawfully entered the United States. Migrants without proof of legal immigration status and lacking registration may face immediate arrest under the outlined directive.

This strategy aims to streamline the process of removing millions of migrants from the convoluted and opaque immigration court system. Instead, those individuals would be swiftly charged with criminal offenses, expediting their detention and subsequent deportation, as highlighted by the sources.

“I think it’s a joke that they think aliens will actually report to register,” said one Homeland Security source.

Another source said that on migrants with pending asylum claims or similar applications will actually register “so they can prove they’re not cheating or running away.

Former Denver ICE chief John Fabbricatore told The Post that the move “puts more of a consequence on being in the country without permission,” to include illegal border crossers and immigrants who overstayed their visas.

Migrants who are considered to be in the country illegally are currently considered to be committing a civil offense and not a criminal one.

It’s a major expansion of the Trump administration’s mass deportation effort, which has said it is focused on mainly catching criminals, to target millions of illegal migrants.

However, reports are emerging that ICE is broadening its crackdown — with many migrants who haven’t been charged with crimes being swept up in immigration raids.

Under Trump’s registration plan, all illegal immigrations over the age of 14 will be required to submit their fingerprints and home addresses to the registry, according to US Citizens and Immigration Services. 

And if they don’t register, they could be hit with up to a $5,000 fine and face up to six months in prison, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday. 

“Aliens in this country illegally face a choice,” read a memo from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on the incoming policy. “They can return home and follow the legal process to come to the United States or they can deal with the consequences of continuing to violate our laws.”

ICE picked up 20,000 migrants in just one month — almost as many as the Biden administration caught in all of fiscal year 2024, the DHS recently said.

But border czar Tom Homan expressed frustration that federal agents are moving fast enough.

Trump and members of his administration have said they are hoping to deport millions of migrants, which will require a significant acceleration in arrests.

Once the registry is up and running, illegal migrants will have to submit their information to the feds within 30 days, according to documents viewed by the Wall Street Journal. 

“Once an alien has registered and appeared for fingerprinting (unless waived), DHS will issue evidence of registration, which aliens over the age of 18 must carry and keep in their possession at all times,” read a notice on the US Citizens and Immigration Services website posted Tuesday.

“It is the legal obligation of all unregistered aliens (or previously registered children who turn 14 years old) in the United States to comply with these requirements,” the notice continues. “Failure to comply will result in criminal and civil penalties, up to and including misdemeanor prosecution and the payment of fines.”

It’s not the first time the US government has created such a registry. A registry to hunt down suspected communist immigrants was created in 1940, but it stopped by the 1960s after proving to be too costly, according to the Journal.

Former President George W. Bush also created an immigration registry following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, which resulted in the arrests and deportations of tens of thousands of immigrants.

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