The number of immigrant deportations under the Obama administration has dipped to the lowest level the country has seen in nearly a decade.
A total of 235,413 undocumented immigrants were deported in the last fiscal year, between October 2014 and September 2015. The figures mark the fewest deportations in the U.S. since 2006, a resounding shift for President Obama, who early in his presidency was reviled by immigration advocates as the nation’s “deporter-in-chief.”
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A large bulk of total deportations, 165,935, were out of arrests made at the U.S. border. Another 69,478 removals were from the interior of the U.S., marking a clear shift in strategies as immigration officials aggressively pursued convicted criminals as a priority for deportation. Nearly 98% of all deportations fell within the Department of Homeland Security’s enforcement strategies, the agency announced Tuesday when releasing it’s year-end immigration statistics.
“Last year’s removal and return statistics are characterized primarily by three things: first, last year’s removal numbers reflect this Department’s increased focus on prioritizing convicted criminals and threats to public safety, border security and national security,” Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said in a statement.









