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Secure Communities
Headline News
6/19/2009 Miami, FL New program enhances identifying and deporting criminal aliens in 9 Florida counties
6/16/2009 Laredo, TX 5 additional Texas counties become part of new program to enhance identification and removal of criminal aliens
6/10/2009 Edinburg, TX New program launched to enhance identification and removal of criminal aliens in six South Texas counties
5/26/2009 San Diego, CA New program launched to enhance identification and removal of criminal aliens in San Diego County
5/19/2009 Huntsville, TX Texas' prison system is the first to partner with ICE to automatically identify and remove criminal aliens
3/9/2009 Fairfax, VA New ICE program enhances identifying and removing criminal aliens in Fairfax county
May 1, 2009
Secure Communities
Secure Communities: Mission
Secure Communities: A Comprehensive Plan to Identify and Remove Criminal Aliens is a Department of Homeland Security initiative that improves public safety by implementing a comprehensive, integrated approach to identify and remove criminal aliens from the United States. The Secure Communities Program Management Office coordinates all ICE planning, operational, technical, and fiscal activities devoted to transforming, modernizing, and optimizing the criminal alien enforcement process.
Congress has allocated $1.4 billion for ICE criminal alien enforcement in 2009.
Secure Communities: A Comprehensive plan to Identify and Remove Criminal Aliens is built on three pillars that address specific challenges.

The Challenge: Identify
Determining the identity, criminal history, and immigration status of suspected criminal aliens before they have been released from local law enforcement custody has been a long-standing challenge for ICE. Traditional document-based methods of identification are:
- Labor-intensive and time-consuming
- Limited by the accuracy of the biographic information obtained from the suspect
- Complicated by use of aliases and other false biographic data
Complicating this challenge is the fact that criminal history records and immigration records are held by different, non-integrated systems.
The Solution: Modernize Criminal Alien Identification
The Secure Communities plan responds to the identification challenge by combining biometric identification technologies currently in use by the FBI and other parts of DHS in a new, powerful way.
The technology enables local Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) to initiate an integrated records check of criminal history and immigration status for individuals in their custody.
A single submission of fingerprints as part of the normal criminal arrest / booking process will automatically check both the Integrated Automatic Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS) of the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division and the Automated Biometric Identification System (IDENT) of the Department of Homeland Security’s United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) Program.
When there is a fingerprint match in both systems, ICE and the local LEA that encountered the individual are automatically notified, in parallel.
ICE evaluates each case to determine the individual’s immigration status and provides a timely response to local law enforcement partners—usually within a few hours. ICE is committed to responding around the clock, corresponding to the real-time needs of its local law enforcement partners.
The Challenge: Prioritize
Information on the total size, locations, and characteristics of the criminal alien population is based on estimates. A lack of reliable data complicates planning and scaling operations to meet the challenge with limited resources.
The Solution: Prioritize Enforcement Actions
The Secure Communities plan has adopted a risk-based approach to prioritizing enforcement actions in order to maximize the impact on public safety. By assessing the risk each criminal alien poses to the public, ICE focuses immigration enforcement on the most dangerous criminal aliens first.
The most dangerous criminal aliens are individuals who have been previously convicted of or who are currently charged with a Level 1 offense—national security, homicide, kidnapping, assault, robbery, sex offenses and narcotics crimes that carry a sentence of greater than one year.
By prioritizing immigration enforcement actions on the most dangerous criminals, from apprehension through removal from the United States, ICE uses its resources judiciously. The Secure Communities plan enables ICE to strengthen public safety while reducing disruption to law-abiding immigrant families and communities.
The Challenge: Transform
Biometric identification is deploying to the approximately 30,000 local jails and booking stations throughout the nation. Even with prioritized deployment and enforcement actions focusing on the highest threats to community safety, the number of dangerous criminal aliens taken into ICE custody is increasing dramatically. Enhanced identification activity creates a commensurate need to accommodate an increased number of criminal aliens through apprehension, processing, detention, and ultimately, removal from the United States.
The Solution: Transform ICE Business Processes and Systems
To accommodate the increased number of criminal aliens, ICE is taking a mission-centric approach to optimize capacity — detention bed space, transportation resources to facilitate detainee transfers, and professionally trained staff to work the cases. Automated systems and a renewed focus on process efficiency will reduce the amount of time criminal aliens spend in ICE custody and increase the speed with which they are removed from the United States. ICE is investing in:
- Video teleconferencing equipment to facilitate interviews and immigration hearings
- Sophisticated computer systems to manage bed space and transportation reservations and utilization
- Integrated case and detainee management systems that track an individual throughout the immigration enforcement lifecycle
These investments plus state-of-the-art tools that provide an integrated end-to-end picture of the criminal alien enforcement process strengthen ICE capabilities to:
- Perform scenario-based needs analysis for detention beds, transportation, and staffing
- Understand the risks, trade-offs, and system-wide impacts of specific actions
- Support and measure investment decisions
- Optimize overall capacity and operating efficiency
Progress to Date
ICE is rapidly deploying biometric identification capability across the country with national coverage expected by 2012. For current status and information about Secure Communities strategic goals and recent successes please visit the Secure Communities web page.

