EXCLUSIVE: DHS seeks custody of illegal immigrant charged with murder after Trump deportation, Biden release

This story raises questions about governance, accountability, and American values.

Source: Fox News
1 min read
Why This Matters

Here's the timeline that matters: Akbor Miah gets an order of deportation under Trump, and instead of leaving the country, he's released back onto American soil under Biden. Now a woman is dead, allegedly at his hands, and DHS is scrambling to lodge a detainer after the fact. That's not a bureaucratic footnote.

New Republican Times Editorial Board

EXCLUSIVE: DHS seeks custody of illegal immigrant charged with murder after Trump deportation, Biden release
Image via Fox News

ICE has lodged a detainer against Akbor Miah, a Bangladeshi illegal immigrant charged with murdering his sister-in-law in Lake County, Florida.

Original source:

Read at Fox News

How We See It

New Republican Times Editorial Board

Here's the timeline that matters: Akbor Miah gets an order of deportation under Trump, and instead of leaving the country, he's released back onto American soil under Biden. Now a woman is dead, allegedly at his hands, and DHS is scrambling to lodge a detainer after the fact. That's not a bureaucratic footnote. That's the entire immigration enforcement debate compressed into one case file.

We keep hearing that detainers and deportation orders are just paperwork, that the system is more complicated than headlines suggest. Fine. But somewhere in that complexity, a man who was legally ordered out of the country stayed in it, and someone's sister-in-law paid for it. Nobody in the previous administration seems eager to explain how that happened, and we suspect that's because there isn't a good answer. There's just a policy preference for release over removal, dressed up in humanitarian language.

This isn't about painting every immigrant as a threat. It's about a system that had every opportunity to prevent this specific outcome and chose not to. The deportation order existed. The mechanism existed. What was missing was the will to use it, and that failure now has a name attached to it and a family that will never get her back.

If ICE has to fight for custody of someone who was already ordered removed, the problem was never the law. It's who decided not to enforce it.

Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.