Deport Alien Gang Members Act
What this could mean for your district
The Deport Alien Gang Members Act aims to make non-U.S. nationals associated with criminal gangs inadmissible and subject to deportation. • This bill may affect local law enforcement practices regarding gang-related activities. • It could influence community safety perceptions, particularly in areas with known gang presence. • Local immigrant communities may experience heightened scrutiny and concerns about legal status. • The bill may impact local resources for legal assistance and support services for affected individuals. AI-generated from official bill summary; verify with bill text.
Bill details
Bill overview
A neutral overview based on official congressional sources.
Introduced in House
Deport Alien Gang Members Act This bill makes non-U.S. nationals ( aliens under federal law) associated with criminal gangs inadmissible for entry into the United States and deportable. The bill also establishes procedures to designate groups as criminal gangs. An individual shall be inadmissible if certain officers or agencies know or have reason to believe that the individual is or was a criminal gang member or has participated or aided such a group's illegal activities. An individual who is or was a member of such a gang, has participated or aided such a group's illegal activities, or seeks to enter or has entered the United States in furtherance of such activity shall be deportable. Such individuals must be subject to mandatory detention. Furthermore, such individuals shall not be eligible for (1) asylum; (2) temporary protected status; (3) special immigrant juvenile visas; or (4) parole, unless they are assisting the government in a law enforcement matter. The bill defines a criminal gang as a group of five or more persons (1) where one of its primary purposes is committing specified criminal offenses and its members have engaged in a continuing series of such offenses within the past five years, or (2) that has been designated as a criminal gang by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The bill also establishes procedures for DHS to designate a group as a criminal gang, including notifying Congress, publishing a notice in the Federal Register, and providing an opportunity for the group to petition for review of the designation.
Related votes
Roll calls that reference this bill in official data.
Primary sources
Official links to verify details. No interpretation.