PULSE POINTS:
❓What Happened: A government memo reveals that the Trump administration has developed broad guidelines for detaining migrants at Guantanamo Bay, permitting officials to send migrants associated with organized crime to the base.
👥 Who’s Involved: The Trump administration, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Department of Defense (DoD), and migrants.
📍 Where & When: Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The memo was signed on March 7.
💬 Key Quote: Theresa Cardinal Brown noted that the memo’s rules “apply very broadly to any immigrant who came to the U.S. via the U.S.-Mexico border.”
⚠️ Impact: The memo allows for wide-reaching discretion in selecting migrants for detention at Guantanamo, challenging previous assertions that only high-threat criminals would be held there.
IN FULL:
A new memo shows the Trump administration’s wide-reaching authority to detain migrants at Guantanamo Bay, expanding beyond only “the worst” offenders. This development is part of Trump’s broader policy to crack down on illegal immigration.
The agreement, signed in early March by top officials from the Departments of Homeland Security (DHS) and Defense (DoD), sets criteria for detaining migrants based not on criminal history but rather a “nexus” to transnational criminal organizations or criminal drug activity. Officials have defined this connection broadly, which could include paying a criminal group for smuggling services into the United States.
The guidelines allow for detaining migrants with final deportation orders who have interacted in any way with organized crime, including direct or indirect interactions. The Department of Defense confirmed the memo. The DoD has highlighted its role in clarifying operational roles at Guantanamo Bay between DHS and DoD.
Theresa Cardinal Brown, a former U.S. immigration official, stated that many illegals could have some form of interaction with a crime syndicate. This is due to the territorial control established by cartels in Mexico.
Trump administration officials defend the strategy as vital to national security. White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said operations at Guantanamo for detaining migrants will proceed without changes. Currently, 42 individuals are detained at the base.