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The United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) included a Cuban citizen identified as Francisco Jorge-Salgado in the public list of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) titled "Worst of the Worst".
On this official platform where the federal government showcases immigrants with criminal records who have been arrested by the agency, it is noted that the Cuban has several convictions attributed to him.
Among the offenses are sale of amphetamines, domestic violence, dangerous drugs, possession of cocaine, possession of firearms, violation of probation, and assault.
The record also indicates that he was arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
The DHS maintains a site titled “Arrested: Worst of the Worst” (wow.dhs.gov), where it “highlights” cases of immigrants arrested by ICE as part of its operations, framing it within a deportation strategy that prioritizes individuals with criminal records.
The available material on Francisco Jorge-Salgado only includes, for now, the list of attributed crimes and the place of detention (Minneapolis, Minnesota).
The arrest date, exact immigration status, current procedural status, and whether there are new charges or if it only concerns prior records are not specified in that document.
The label "worst of the worst" has been used by DHS to describe certain detainees by ICE, and local media have reported that in Minnesota, hundreds of individuals are listed on that government portal.
The Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security, Tricia McLaughlin, warned that ICE is acting swiftly to arrest even more gang members and "make the United States safe again."
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stated on January 20 that the country is heading toward “another historic year” under the presidency of Donald Trump, with record deportations, border control, and a reduction in drug trafficking.
A statement released by the agency details how, under the leadership of Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, the DHS “has restored the rule of law” and achieves figures that demonstrate having the safest border in the modern history of the country.
Official data indicates that in 2025 nearly three million illegal immigrants left the United States: around 2.2 million due to “self-deportation” and more than 675,000 due to direct expulsion by immigration authorities.
The report also highlights that fentanyl trafficking at the southern border has decreased “by more than half” compared to the year 2024, and the Coast Guard seized enough cocaine “to kill 177 million Americans.”
Moreover, the DHS claimed to have saved taxpayers over $13.2 billion. According to the authorities, the current administration is consolidating an "unprecedented sustained deterrence" in border apprehensions.
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