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These two counties in NY ignore Hochul – and help ice

Two Venezuelan migrants, who are said to be members of the Tren de Aragua gang, were released without deposit last week after the district prosecutor's office in Queens reduced their crime and drug suspicions to lower crimes.

You should have been on the next flight to Caracas and shouldn't go through the streets of New York.

In accordance with the protection laws of the city and the state, which restrict the cooperation with the efforts to immigrate to President Trump to deport criminal aliens.

But when governor Kathy Hochul, state democrats and progressive prosecutors will not play a ball with the president and the immigration and customs authority, two counties in New York become.

Rensselaer County, east of Albany, has been working with federal partners since 2018 to remove migrant criminals when the County Executive Steve McLaughlin came to ICES 287 (G) program.

The program trains the MPs of the local sheriff in immigration rights and enables them to ask them about their status.

If he realizes that a suspect is illegally in the United States, he can submit a prisoner and hand over the person to ice for deportation procedures.

Despite the relatively small population of Rensselaer County, the officials are hundreds of dangerous, illegal persons in the district prison and prove that even in less populated areas, close cooperation with ice is a cost-effective means of protecting public security.

By allowing ICE agents to take these criminals directly from prison, instead of tracking them down after the publication, the program also significantly reduces the risks for state and local law enforcement officers.

This month, Bruce Blakeman, manager of Nassau County, has also fallen below 287 (G). He put 50 committed prison cells for criminals and provided 10 specialized detective in Nassau County with the authority to carry out immigration liability outside of prison systems.

In order to justify these measures, Blakeman pointed to serious crimes committed by illegal migrants in Nassau, including a Honduran citizen who raped a young girl and a gang of South American robbers who cut off their ankle monitors with their own burglary.

Long Island has been fighting for transnational gangs like MS-13 for years.

“If you know that you always do it if there are no consequences for criminal activities,” said Blakeman.

Rensselaer and Nassau – the only two New York counties that work so closely with ice – offer plans for local guides nationwide.

The more expansive tactic of Nassau makes sense for a district with extensive resources and a major immigration problem, especially for a cross -border city.

Meanwhile, Rensselaer shows that even small jurisdiction can see real results when they work with ICE.

Mayor Eric Adams has taken over the rhetoric of reinforcement-and his public appearances with the border zar Tom Homan have made him or New York City a lot.

If Adams wants to meet his promises of law and order, he must be the top priority of the end of the migrant crisis and the associated crime.

This means that you can carry out the re -hiring of the ice on Rikers Island and work directly with federal agents to the Department of Correction and the NYPD.

If the city's outdated protective laws from the Blasio era prevent Adams Rikers from placing an ice cream office, how about a problem bypass?

Maybe he could open an ice station at the end of the Rikers Island Bridge.

Cooperation with the government to reduce the population of the criminal migrant is in the truest sense of the word and figuratively.

Subway immolations and gangland drug rings threaten the ability of every New Yorker without living without fear.

And a super majority (72%) of the city voters prefers to help immigration officials deporting criminal foreigners – one of the few things to agree to the New York of all political beliefs seem to agree.

Trump is dead with deportations.

The more New York is hindered, the more his administration wants to put the Empire State into his crosshairs.

The shield around criminal extraterrestrial dignity Washington and the nation signal that New York is willing to work with the new administration.

In view of a migrant crisis that goes beyond their control, the New Yorkers have spent more than 7 billion US dollars than their fair proportion of national burden in New York City over the past three years.

Public services have been overwhelmed, countless life on behalf of the sanctuary guidelines.

Enough is enough.

Those who come here and remain our laws earn their day in court according to the proper procedure.

But those who arrive under a claim of asylum and then against the law do not deserve the continuing benefits of our hospitality.

Law enforcement authorities and local officers are obliged to work with the federal government to ensure that criminal consequences have.

Even in the most inviting city of the nation, you can evade your greeting.

Paul Dreyer is a political analyst of the cities at the Manhattan Institute, where Kerry Soropoulos is Collegiate Associate.