Trump's 'Department of Deportation' pursuit leaves child predators free to roam as agents are pulled from pedophile hunts
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According to an investigation by the New York Times, Donald Trump’s aggressive deportation strategies are undermining vital Homeland Security operations. These efforts have left fewer resources to monitor serious threats such as child predators, terrorists, and sex traffickers.

Federal agents who typically focus on dismantling child exploitation networks have been reassigned for extended periods to support deportation initiatives. This shift has significantly hindered the government’s ability to pursue individuals involved in pedophilia.

A long-standing national security investigation into Iranian oil sales, which allegedly fund terrorism, has been neglected for months. This has enabled oil tankers and millions in potential terror financing to evade detection as the focus shifts to immigration control.

Investigations into human smuggling and sex trafficking have also been put on hold, as agents are redirected to deportation tasks.

The Coast Guard, too, has been redirected to support the immigration crackdown, using its aircraft to transport immigrants between detention facilities instead of conducting maritime patrols. Additionally, the department has paused training programs at its law enforcement academy to quickly train new immigration officers.

The New York Times gathered insights by interviewing over 65 federal government officials.

Their investigation also looked at international documents from DHS that include search warrants, arrests, information about workloads and more – all through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.

Officials at DHS and the White House backed the president’s homeland security overhaul, saying that immigration is a key issue and essential to national security and the safety of Americans everywhere.

In late May, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem issued a warning to the department, telling ICE officials that no one's jobs would be safe, including her own, if deportation levels did not pick up

In late May, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem issued a warning to the department, telling ICE officials that no one’s jobs would be safe, including her own, if deportation levels did not pick up

Amid the Trump administration's renewed push to prioritize ICE-led deportations, several other critical Homeland Security missions are reportedly being neglected, according to a New York Times investigation

Amid the Trump administration’s renewed push to prioritize ICE-led deportations, several other critical Homeland Security missions are reportedly being neglected, according to a New York Times investigation

Federal agents, including US Marshalls, FBI agents and HSI agents, detain a woman during an immigration enforcement raid in Massachusetts

Federal agents, including US Marshalls, FBI agents and HSI agents, detain a woman during an immigration enforcement raid in Massachusetts

US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks during a tour of the Terrorist Confinement Center (CECOT) as prisoners stand, looking out from a cell in El Salvador

US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks during a tour of the Terrorist Confinement Center (CECOT) as prisoners stand, looking out from a cell in El Salvador

The White House responded to the story saying ‘any insinuation that the Trump administration isn’t successfully combating dangerous crime is false and uninformed.’

Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the department of homeland security echoed a similar sentiment.

‘Child exploitation, human trafficking, terrorism, financial scams and smuggling all have a nexus to illegal immigration… DHS is mobilizing federal and state law enforcement to find, arrest and deport illegal aliens. We are prioritizing the worst of the worst and aliens with final removal orders. Nearly every day we are arresting pedophiles, known or suspected terrorists, kidnappers, child smugglers and sex traffickers, including those who entered our country illegally,’ McLaughlin said.

However, critics argue that the changes at the departmental level have been significantly detrimental to other important efforts.

A Times analysis of information obtained through their FOIA showed that Homeland Security investigators worked about 33% fewer hours on child exploitation cases from February through April of this year, compared to the same time frame in years before.

Computer scientist Hany Farid, who helped design software used by police to identify child sex abuse content, calls it ‘heartbreaking.’

‘You can’t say you care about kids when you’re diverting actual resources that are protecting children,’ Farid added.

In late May, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem issued a warning to the department, telling ICE officials that no one’s jobs would be safe, including her own, if deportation levels did not pick up.

DHS numbers show that illegal immigration has hit a record low – they have deported more than 55,000 people so far – hitting a daily removal cadence that has not been seen since the Obama administration.

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