Operation Front Line

Operation Front Line
DurationMonths leading up to the 2004 US Presidential election and through the 2005 Presidential Inauguration
LocationUnited States
TypeLaw enforcement operation
ThemeImmigration enforcement, national security
CausePerceived vulnerabilities in immigration and trade systems
MotiveTo address potential national security threats
TargetImmigration violators
BudgetUnknown
Organised byICE
OutcomeUnknown
ArrestsUnknown
Limited public information available

Operation Front Line is an initiative of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a division of the Department of Homeland Security, that operated in the months leading up to the 2004 presidential election and through the 2005 Presidential Inauguration.

Overview

[edit]

Little information about the program has been publicly revealed. An Office of Management and Budget cost–benefit analysis described the program as carried out "to address potential vulnerabilities in immigration and trade systems relative to the national security of the United States." An ICE spokesperson has noted that the program "focused on immigration violators that may have imposed an enhanced public safety or national security threat."

The cost of the program, the criteria used for arrest, and the overall scope of the program have not been publicly revealed.

See also

[edit]
[edit]