WASHINGTON — Two top officials have been reassigned amid frustrations in the Trump administration about the pace of , according to two officials with knowledge of the moves.
Staff members at Immigration and Customs Enforcement were informed Tuesday evening that two top officials in the agency responsible for in the country illegally — Russell Hott and Peter Berg — had been reassigned, according to a official and an administration official. The officials spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the issue.
The Department of Homeland Security said ICE “needs a culture of accountability that it has been starved of for the past four years.”
“We have a President, DHS Secretary, and American people who rightfully demand results, and our ICE leadership will ensure the agency delivers,” Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said Wednesday in an emailed statement.
Berg will return to the ICE office in St. Paul, Minnesota, according to the Homeland Security official who spoke to the AP. Hott will return to ICE’s Washington field office, according to The Washington Post, which was first to report the reassignments.
Todd Lyons, who was recently the top immigration enforcement official in the Boston area, will assume the top position at Enforcement and Removal Operations, and his deputy will be Garrett Ripa, the officials told the AP.
They said no reason was given for the reshuffle. But it came the day President Donald Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, said he was unsatisfied with the pace of immigration arrests and with recent releases of people from immigration custody.
ICE — specifically, its Enforcement and Removal Operations arm — is the key agency tasked with carrying out the Republican president’s pledge of of people in the country illegally during his second term.
Homan, speaking to reporters outside the White House, said arrests in the interior — of those who haven’t recently arrived in the country — is about three times higher than it was this time last year, under President Joe Biden.
“Three times higher is good. But I’m not satisfied,” Homan said. “We got to get more.”
Homan said he had also talked to ICE leadership about the number of people who had been released from immigration custody. From now on, he said, no one would be released without ICE leadership signing off.
“The number of releases was unacceptable,” Homan said, “and that’s been fixed.”
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