The Journal. - The Florida Cops Who Act as ICE Agents

Episode Date: September 22, 2025

The Florida Highway Patrol has taken up the Trump administration’s call for state and local law enforcement to play a bigger role in its immigration crackdown. Virtually all its officers have been t...rained to participate in a controversial Immigration and Customs Enforcement program that deputizes police to perform some of the duties of federal immigration officers. WSJ’s Arian Campo-Flores takes us along for a ride with some officers in the program. Jessica Mendoza hosts.  Further Listening: - Inside the ICE Hiring Blitz- The Hyundai Plant Raided By Immigration Authorities- "I'm Thinking I'm 100% Legal." Then ICE Raided His Company.Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Our colleague Our colleague Our colleague Arienne Campo Flores, who covers Florida, has been on plenty of police ride-alongs before. Drug busts, gang investigations, routine patrols. But this one, in Lake Worth, Florida, this one was different. I honestly didn't know what to expect. I've never done a ride-along of this nature before.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Arien wrote along with Master Sergeant Tony Kingery, a Florida Highway Patrol. You know, those state troopers with the wide-brimmed hats and khaki uniforms, the officers who might ticket you for speeding. Except on this day in July, Sergeant Kingery was keeping an eye out for something else, undocumented immigrants. So at one point, we were driving through this commercial district
Starting point is 00:00:59 and then he noticed a white van. So there's a vign over here, but he ain't going to go now. A white van missing a bumper, a clear violation of traffic law. It doesn't have a front bumper, which is illegal in the state of Florida. You have to have a front bumper. And so Sergeant Kingery then pulled another U-turn to get behind him, and that's when he also noticed that the van was missing a rear taillight. and he flashed his siren
Starting point is 00:01:32 and so he decided to pull it over. Kingery walked up to the driver and told him about the missing bumper and broken taillight. He also asked the driver for his license. And that's when the traffic stop became more than just a traffic stop. The guy behind the wheel didn't speak English. And instead of producing a license, the driver handed over a Guatemalan consular ID.
Starting point is 00:02:04 And so at that point, Sergeant Kingery asks him, Sir, are you a U.S. citizen? Are you a U.S. citizen? That question isn't something you'd necessarily expect during a routine traffic stop. But that's changing. The driver and his passenger both ended up in handcuffs on suspicion they were in the country illegally.
Starting point is 00:02:25 This quick escalation, from broken bumper to immigration arrest, was made possible by a federal program that grants immigration enforcement powers to state and local police. And Florida is leading the way. Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power. I'm Jessica Mendoza.
Starting point is 00:02:44 It's Monday, September 22nd. Coming up on the show, when state troopers enforce immigration law. This episode is brought to you by Nespresso Professional. Designed to create meaningful moments of connection at work. Nespresso Professional delivers exceptional coffee every time. With variety at your fingertips, you are sure to satisfy every taste. Discover the right solution for your workplace today.
Starting point is 00:03:25 Unforgettable coffee, meaningful connections. So, Nispresso professional. Visit nispresso.com slash pro to learn more. So how does a routine traffic stop on a Florida highway end with people in the custody of immigration and customs enforcement? The answer lies in a federal program called 287G. 287G program. A controversial program called 287G. 287G basically authorizes state and local officers to perform some immigration enforcement duties under ICE supervision.
Starting point is 00:04:05 The idea was to partner with ICE to expand the agency's reach. How did this program, 287G, how did it come about? So 287G got its name from this provision of federal law, a law that was passed in the late 1990s. I signed a presidential directive to the heads of all executive departments that allowed, for federal immigration agencies to deputize state and local law enforcement to carry out certain immigration-related functions. Instructing them to very quickly expand and strengthen our program to reduce illegal immigration. And that program, 287G, has gone through a lot of iterations depending on which administration has been in power. So, for instance, under the George W. Bush administration, that program,
Starting point is 00:04:57 expanded. Under the Obama administration, it shrank. Under the first Trump administration, it grew again. When Trump was elected a second time, he revived a controversial form of 287G called the task force model. That's the model that lets police act almost like ICE agents while they're going about their usual law enforcement duties. So things like checking immigration status during a traffic stop, detaining people they think are here illegally, and, handing them over for processing. Reviving this part of 287G would go towards achieving one of Trump's
Starting point is 00:05:33 key campaign promises. Immediately upon taking the oath of office, I will launch the largest deportation program in American history. The Trump administration as part of its broader illegal immigration crackdown has made clear that it
Starting point is 00:05:49 would like to have the support of state and local law enforcement to act as what they term force multipliers. in immigration enforcement operations. What's the goal here? Like, when you talk about force multipliers, what does that mean? The goal here is basically to enhance the capabilities of ICE.
Starting point is 00:06:11 Really, the thrust here is just to have more personnel available, more resources available, more vehicles out on the roads, more traffic stops, and more encounters with potential undocumented immigrants. And so far, no state has embraced Trump's elite. immigration crackdown, as forcefully as Florida. The Sunshine State this year allocated nearly $300 million into immigration enforcement work. It also built an immigration detention center in the Everglades, dubbed Alligator Alcatraz, a fortress-like compound rising from the wetlands.
Starting point is 00:06:44 Now, the state is going all in on 287G. Florida is the leader. It's the leading state in striking 287G agreements with us. Across America, there are about 500 task force agreements under 287G. And of those agreements? More than half of those are Florida agencies, whether they be at the state level or local police. And the Florida Highway Patrol, specifically, of the roughly 1,800 troopers that the Florida Highway Patrol has, nearly all of them have undergone the training and have achieved the designation of designated immigration. immigration officers, D-I-Os.
Starting point is 00:07:29 But while Florida is leaning in, civil liberties groups and advocates for immigrant rights are raising alarms. These are our neighbors, not criminals, murderers, or rapists. 287G has no place here. We are the people.
Starting point is 00:07:44 The criticism is that it is a recipe for racial profiling, that it encourages officers to use the pretext of a traffic stop to actually further this deportation agenda. Loud say it clear.
Starting point is 00:08:03 Immigrants are welcome here. When they're asking me for my papers and they're not asking you for your papers, then they're making that determination on their own. And that... Critics like the ACLU also argue that 287G pulls local police away from their usual work, stuff like traffic safety, crash scenes, and neighborhood patrols.
Starting point is 00:08:23 In this new system, how does oversight work? ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told us in the head of their Miami Field Office that this is all done under their supervision because ICE and Border Patrol have undergone significant training to actually carry out immigration enforcement duties. You're not going to be able to learn all the complexities of how to do that with one week of training. Meanwhile, the Trump administration sees the program as an important tool for expanding its immigration. crackdown. And I wanted to see how it was being used. And so I was just really curious to be able to see firsthand how this was being put into practice.
Starting point is 00:09:11 You know, what did this look like? The traffic stop on it and check it out. After the break, the rest of Ariens ride along with Florida Highway Patrol. Today's day, we're going to be doing some saturation patrols here in Palm East County. The morning of Ariens' ride along, he sat in on a pre-operation briefing. That day's deployment included 10 troopers, several supervisors, helicopter support, two federal officers from ICE and a Border Patrol agent. Sergeant Tony Kingery instructed the troopers. He's the officer Aryan would end up riding along with.
Starting point is 00:10:04 I look for those vehicles that could possibly have a large amount of illegals in that vehicle. So he wanted them to focus on this one particular geographic area that straddles both sides of Interstate 95. It was an area he said was believed to be saturated, in his words, with undocumented immigrants. We have a pretty high area that's saturated with possible illegals in those areas. He said that the troopers should go out and make what he called good traffic stops. Stop those cars for good violations, traffic violations. And if that then led to the potential apprehension of an undocumented immigrant.
Starting point is 00:10:47 So be it. So be it. That was the sort of the point of the operation. And so that was before the ride along. when you did go on the streets with Sergeant Kingery, you know, what did you see? Yeah, I got sort of a sampling of what stops they made. So, for instance, one stop was of a pickup truck that was towing a trailer. The trailer was missing its license plate, which is required to have. And so the trooper pulled the vehicle over.
Starting point is 00:11:17 An officer stopped the driver and questioned him. He was suspected of being in the country illegally and detained. ICE agents were also on hand with laptops connected to federal databases. Those ICE officers can then pull up, get the person's name, run them through their databases, and then get information as to whether they may be missed a court hearing, or they were previously deported and re-entered. In less than an hour, state troopers had stopped several vehicles and detained several people they suspected of being in the country illegally.
Starting point is 00:11:51 It went on like this throughout the morning. The officers pulled folks over for traffic violations, including one passenger who wasn't wearing a seatbelt, and detained suspected undocumented immigrants. Several of the detainees were dressed in fluorescent green shirts bearing the name of a lawn service company. It was later on in the day that Sergeant Kingery encountered that white van, the one we told you about at the start of the episode, with the missing bumper and broken daylight. So the driver and the passenger, or both Guatemalan immigrants, in the driver's case, he was 28 years old, he had had a conviction for driving under the influence, he had suspended driving privileges, and he had also been given a notice to appear in court that had been issued by Border Patrol. How did the driver react to this encounter with Sergeant Kingery? As more troopers arrived and the ICE officers arrived and the situation became clearly more serious for him, he repeatedly said in Spanish, I have a baby son at home, please let me call home to talk to my baby son. He at one point crouched down and just started retching. His face got really red and he just looked like a ball of nerves, very distraught.
Starting point is 00:13:11 The passenger in the van said he was 18 years old in attending school. He pleaded with officers not to initiate deportation proceedings against him and deny that he was in the country illegally. Their protests didn't work. The officers led both men to another vehicle. They removed their handcuffs and put them in zip ties that were provided by the ICE agents. And they loaded them onto the back of this pickup to head toward this border patrol
Starting point is 00:13:41 station where they would then be processed. The two detainees never made it there. Fifteen minutes after the pickup truck left, Sergeant Kingery's radio crackled with an update. The two men had escaped. Apparently, when the trooper's vehicle stopped at an interstate exit. The child locks were not engaged on the back doors. And so they bolted out of the car, took off running,
Starting point is 00:14:08 went through like a car dealer's ship and on through this area where there was warehouses and there was a parking lot full of school buses and other facilities. And that then initiates essentially a manhunt for these two individuals who had escaped. The Florida Highway Patrol helicopter was circling overhead, but after significantly more than an hour, they just called it and they moved on. By the end of the day, Florida Highway Patrol had detained 23 people, not including the two who escaped. The executive director of the Highway Patrol summed up how the operation went.
Starting point is 00:14:49 In his words, he said, you win some, you lose some. Arian later learned that the driver, the guy who had begged to call his baby son, was eventually arrested. The younger passenger hasn't been caught. These state troopers already had a job before they were deputized in this way. They write speeding tickets, they attend crash scenes, things like that. How sustainable is it for local or state law enforcement to also take on the duties of federal immigration agents? It is time-consuming, and it does consume resources. But the DeSantis administration in Florida has made clear that this is a priority for the state, for his administration,
Starting point is 00:15:34 to support the Trump administration's illegal immigration crackdown. And so as a policy decision, you know, if that is a priority, then you're going to dedicate resources to it. And while immigrant advocacy groups remain concerned, supporters see that arrests and detentions are up. And by those measures, 287G is doing exactly what it was designed to do. The Florida Highway Patrol has been the lead agency involved in more than 3,500 apprehensions of people suspected of being in the country illegally. That's a big number. 3,500. So I think the evidence is there that if this is a policy you're in agreement with, 287G can help boost apprehensions of suspected undocumented immigrants.
Starting point is 00:16:22 The Trump administration has said it would like to have at least 20,000 state and local law enforcement trained to carry out some of these immigration enforcement duties. In other words, this experiment could just be the beginning, and it could reshape the work of local and state law enforcement across the country. It's potentially a glimpse of where things could be headed. I mean, the director of the Florida Highway Patrol told me that he envisions the work that the Florida Highway Patrol is doing as a model for what other state and local agencies can do around the country. And there are hundreds of other task force agreements that have been struck by law enforcement agencies throughout the country. If there are jurisdictions and there are states that decide that this is a policy that they want to pursue,
Starting point is 00:17:16 they can look at Florida as a potential model of how to go about doing that. Additional reporting in this episode from Scott Calvert and Elizabeth Fendell. Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.

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