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Secure Communities
Headline News
6/19/2009 Miami, FL New program enhances identifying and deporting criminal aliens in 9 Florida counties
6/16/2009 Laredo, TX 5 additional Texas counties become part of new program to enhance identification and removal of criminal aliens
6/10/2009 Edinburg, TX New program launched to enhance identification and removal of criminal aliens in six South Texas counties
5/26/2009 San Diego, CA New program launched to enhance identification and removal of criminal aliens in San Diego County
5/19/2009 Huntsville, TX Texas' prison system is the first to partner with ICE to automatically identify and remove criminal aliens
3/9/2009 Fairfax, VA New ICE program enhances identifying and removing criminal aliens in Fairfax county
Working at Secure Communities
ICE’s Secure Communities initiative offers exciting and fulfilling career opportunities. With new advances in biometric technology and an ever-evolving criminal alien landscape, you can be assured that a career at the ICE Secure Communities Program Management Office will truly be the experience of a lifetime. Careers in law enforcement encompass a myriad of jobs that typically welcome individuals with educational and professional backgrounds in criminology, criminal justice, political science, psychology, social work, technology, engineering, and a variety of other liberal arts and science disciplines.
The section below offers us an opportunity to showcase the current Secure Communities leadership.
Select Career Profiles
Marc Rapp, Acting Executive Director
My 14 years in law enforcement have given me opportunities to work on the cutting-edge of identifying and removing criminal aliens. I began my career at the Immigration and Naturalization Service. When DHS was formed, I began working for the ICE immigration investigations process center, which I found very exciting because of the sense of accomplishment I felt when I removed a violent criminal alien. I then worked in the field for Fugitive Operations, where I investigated criminal aliens, sexual offenders, and other at-large fugitive criminal aliens. I was on the transition team from the Office of Investigations to the Office of Detention and Removal Operations during which time I helped develop the Criminal Alien Program (CAP). My career in identifying and removing criminal aliens led me to the Secure Communities initiative, where I contribute to the identification and removal of criminal aliens by implementing biometric technologies to help law enforcement agencies improve performance and increase the efficiency with which they remove criminal aliens. At the Secure Communities Program Management Office, I am thoroughly excited to continue to work on the cutting-edge of identifying and removing criminal aliens.