Deportation Officer Transition Program (dotp) - __exclusive__

Hardline enforcement advocates call it “coddling.” “Deportation officers are not social workers,” says Tom Ridgeway, a former ICE field office director. “The job is to execute final orders. If you can’t handle that, leave. We don’t need a taxpayer-funded guilt-relief program.”

On the left, immigrant rights groups are deeply skeptical. “This feels like ICE trying to launder its reputation,” says Elena Vasquez of the National Immigration Project. “An officer who spent years tearing families apart doesn’t become a healer with a few months of training. That’s not transition. That’s optics.”

Whether DOTP expands nationwide will depend on the next administration’s immigration priorities. But for a small cohort of officers who once saw no exit except burnout, the program offers something rare: a second act in the same story, written with a different ending. If you or someone you know is a deportation officer seeking transition resources, the DOTP hotline is available through the ICE Employee Resource Center (confidential, non-recorded line).