Norms Impact
ICE Barbie’s DHS Trained Criminals to Be Agents
ICE’s hiring surge weakened baseline vetting norms—letting trainees enter a federal enforcement pipeline without completed fingerprints, clean drug screens, or disqualifying-history checks.
Oct 23, 2025
Sources
Summary
ICE allowed some recruits who were not fully vetted into its training program during a hiring surge, and DHS later found recruits with failed drug tests, disqualifying criminal histories, or missing fingerprint submissions needed for background checks.
The agency’s adherence to vetting and drug-test policies was reported by current and former DHS officials to have loosened as ICE moved to rapidly expand staffing after a major funding increase.
The practical consequence is an enforcement workforce pipeline where disqualifying risks can enter training and only be caught after the fact—if they are caught at all.
Reality Check
Letting unvetted recruits enter a federal law-enforcement training pipeline normalizes a security breach in government hiring that can metastasize into unchecked coercive power over our communities and our rights. The conduct described—admitting trainees who failed drug tests, had disqualifying criminal histories, or never submitted fingerprints—reads less like a technical lapse than an institutional decision to treat safeguards as optional when staffing targets tighten. On these facts alone, it is not clearly chargeable as a specific federal crime without evidence of falsified records or knowingly false statements (e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 1001), but it squarely violates core governance norms of competence, due diligence, and public safety in the exercise of state force. When an agency cannot reliably enforce its own background-check gates, the rule of law becomes contingent on who slips through and who gets caught.
Media
Detail
<p>ICE admitted recruits into a six-week training course while some had not completed all required pre-screening steps as the agency pursued expanded hiring. Current and former DHS officials told NBC News that DHS later identified trainees who had failed drug tests, had criminal histories that would prevent joining, or did not meet physical fitness or academic criteria. The officials also said some recruits had not submitted fingerprints, a required element for completing background checks.</p><p>At the ICE training facility in Brunswick, Georgia, one recruit was reported to have been charged with strong-arm robbery and battery connected to a domestic-violence incident. Internal ICE data obtained by NBC News indicated more than 200 recruits have been dismissed since the summer hiring surge, with fewer than ten dismissed for criminal charges, drug tests, or safety concerns; most were dismissed for failing physical or academic metrics.</p><p>DHS disputed the accuracy of the figures and stated most new officers in the surge are experienced law-enforcement hires subject to medical, fitness, and background requirements.</p>