
Legal immigration agency employees asked to volunteer to help ICE operations
CBSN
Officials staffing the U.S. legal immigration system have been asked to volunteer to help Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations, according to an internal notice obtained by CBS News, another sign the Trump administration is prioritizing deportation efforts.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) employees were asked this week to sign up for 60-day assignments — or what the government calls "details" — to assist ICE, the agency charged with carrying out President Trump's mass deportation promise.
The assignments, which could be extended beyond 60 days, are slated to start on March 10 and are planned for different states, according to the internal request sent by Kika Scott, who is leading USCIS in an acting capacity. Two officials at the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees USCIS and ICE, confirmed the authenticity of the email to CBS News.

Hannah Thompson, 17, was on the run, heading out of Simpsonville, South Carolina with her boyfriend, U.S. Army soldier John Blauvelt. On Oct. 26, 2016, Cati Blauvelt, his wife of just a few months, had been found stabbed to death, her body left in a concrete box in an abandoned farmhouse. The knife blade broken off and left in her neck.