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Oct 24, 2025

ICE Recruitment Drive Stumbles as Over One-Third of New Trainees Fail Basic Standards

ICE Recruitment Drive Stumbles as Over One-Third of New Trainees Fail Basic Standards
A Legislative Bulletin released October 24 by the National Immigration Forum reveals significant problems in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s accelerated hiring campaign. Seeking to add **10,000 agents by year-end** to meet the administration’s aggressive removal targets, ICE shortened academy training from 13 weeks to six, waived age limits, and admitted hundreds of recruits before completing background checks.

The result has been chaotic: **more than 200 trainees have been dismissed** in recent weeks for failing drug tests, possessing disqualifying criminal records, or simply being unable to complete minimum fitness requirements—15 push-ups, 32 sit-ups and a 1.5-mile run in under 14 minutes. One ICE official quoted in the bulletin said recruits were “dropping like flies.”

Advocates warn that rushed onboarding compromises both public safety and the due-process rights of those targeted for deportation. The dismissals also raise questions about whether ICE can realistically scale operations to match White House deportation goals without sacrificing professional standards.

For global-mobility managers, the episode is a bellwether: a less-experienced enforcement corps may mean **more workplace audits and site visits conducted by relatively unseasoned officers**, increasing the risk of inconsistent findings. Employers are advised to tighten Form I-9 compliance, rehearse audit protocols, and ensure counsel is on call during enforcement actions.

Congressional oversight hearings are expected in November. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have signaled interest in examining the cost of attrition, the legal liability of cutting training in half, and whether alternative staffing models—such as civilian compliance officers—might deliver better results.
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