A Border Patrol Media Officer Had To Remind His Agency Not To Describe Immigrants As #CatchOfTheDay

“Whether an illegal alien or alleged (or even convicted) criminal, all are human, and should be treated humanely.”

At a time when the Trump administration has made great efforts to portray undocumented people as criminals, the then-director of the United States border enforcement agency’s media division told spokespeople to describe immigrants humanely, with dignity and respect.

An Oct. 26, 2017, email cited Customs and Border Protection’s social media hashtag #CatchOfTheDay as an example of what not to do.

The email was provided to BuzzFeed News by the nonprofit watchdog group American Oversight, which filed a Freedom of Information Act request after it noticed that the Department of Homeland Security used the #CatchOfTheDay hashtag with photos of immigrants the government had apprehended.

The director of CBP’s media division at the time, whose name has been redacted, said everyone the agency interacts with should be treated with dignity and respect.

“Whether an illegal alien or alleged (or even convicted) criminal, all are human, and should be treated humanely,” the email said. “We must guard against using language that detracts from that inherent dignity and respect.”

CBP did not respond to a request to identify who the director was at the time, but Wayback Machine, a digital archive of the internet, shows that Daniel Hetlage was listed as director of CBP’s media division between September 2017 and January 2018. Carlos Diaz is currently acting director of media for CBP.

“We can’t say for certain [the email] was prompted by our FOIA, but the timing is suggestive,” said Clark Pettig, communications director for American Oversight.

The email came at a time when it was revealed by the Intercept that Trump administration officials were trying to portray undocumented immigrants it detained in February raids as criminals. The Intercept published internal emails showing that the administration tried to shape the narrative that “by removing from the streets criminal aliens and other threats to the public, ICE helps improve public safety.”

The message also said that while social media is more conversational and uses creative wordplay to attract people’s attention, it’s an area where CBP spokespeople need to ensure they’re not making light of an individuals’ circumstance.

“I cite as an example the use of ‘catch of the day’ which is appropriate for fish, or substances interdicted, but not in reference to people,” said the director of CBP’s media division.

#CatchOfTheDay USBP arrests 4 illegal aliens w/prior felony convictions, keeping dangerous criminals off our streets https://t.co/OZChjsEXT9

One of the tweets that prompted American Oversight to file the FOIA was posted on Oct. 20, 2017, and showed photographs of four men the Border Patrol in the Tucson, Arizona, sector had arrested. All of them had convictions in the US or Mexico. The convictions included murder, two counts of felony sexual conduct with a minor, and misdemeanor charges of sexual assault.

Prior to this tweet, CBP had used the hashtag to publicize drug interdictions, seizures, and arrests, American Oversight found, adding that the Oct. 20, 2017, tweet was the only one to include pictures of people.

In American Oversight’s Oct. 24, 2017, FOIA request, the group said pairing the hashtag #CatchOfTheDay, invoking the freshest fish being sold or served, with photos of people was dehumanizing. In June the watchdog group filed a lawsuit because it had not received any of the records it asked for.

“The biased, propagandizing nature of combining the hashtag with pictures of detained persons is particularly disturbing in light of recent records,” the watchdog group said.

American Oversight was referencing the records from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and DHS that included instructions to immigration officials across the country to try to portray undocumented immigrants caught in raids as criminals.


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