In a front-page story for Wednesday’s print edition, New York Post reporters Steve Janoski, Craig McCarthy, and our friend Jennie Taer detailed why, amid a long and steady stream of high-profile crimes allegedly committed by illegal immigrants, “federal immigration authorities aren’t deporting suspected criminals at a more rapid rate” in New York City.
The trio explained that, as per “immigration experts…it can be hard — both legally and logistically — for the feds to remove migrants before they’re convicted of a crime.”
And, thanks to soft-on-crime policies such as barring law enforcement from cooperating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) (and, of course, things not mentioned like bail reform), alleged criminals can skate by.
Janoski, McCarthy, and Taer pointed to two laws in the Big Apple that have hamstrung ICE and thus…
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