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Donald Trump's new migrant crime hotline 'trolled with reports of lawbreaking extra-terrestrials'

Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement office has been criticised as discriminatory 

Will Worley
Thursday 27 April 2017 08:04 EDT
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Trump's VOICE hotline has been criticised and mocked
Trump's VOICE hotline has been criticised and mocked (Getty Images)

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Immigration rights activists have reportedly been calling Donald Trump’s new illegal alien crime hotline with reports of criminal extra-terrestrials.

Launched yesterday, the Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) hotline was ordered by President Trump earlier this year and is now being run by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

According to the ICE website, VOICE exists to help victims “impacted by crimes committed by removable criminal aliens”.

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But critics said it discriminated against undocumented migrants, a demographic less likely to commit crime than US citizens, according to numerous studies.

Activists used social media to encourage people to report criminal aliens using the hash tag #AlienDay – which happened to coincide with a day commemorating the Alien sci-fi films.

Immigration was a prominent theme in Mr Trump’s election campaign and he vowed to take strong steps to control migratory movements.

Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said on launching the office that the victims of crimes committed by undocumented migrants were “unique”.

“These are casualties of crimes that should never have taken place because the people who victimized them oftentimes should not have been in the country in the first place,” Mr Kelly said.

But migrant rights groups have criticised the decision to launch VOICE.

“This just continues the campaign strategy Donald Trump employed to vilify immigrants and identify them with a small number of crimes committed by undocumented immigrants,” Brent Wilkes, head the of League of United Latin American Citizens, told the New York Times.

The VOICE initiative has also been dismissed as rhetorical, as it only provides information on individuals in custody, has no additional budget and uses existing ICE staff. Its website also states crimes must still be reported to local police.

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