Billionaire Tom Steyer wants to imprison ICE agents and abolish the agency, he says in a newly released plan, despite his hedge fund throwing $90 million at a company behind California largest immigration detention center.
Steyer posted his immigration enforcement plan, “How California Can Put ICE in Jail,” on X Tuesday afternoon.
He reiterated he believes ICE should be abolished and intensified his rhetoric, also saying they should be treated like a criminal organization.
“It’s not enough for Democrats to simply engage in rhetoric, and ‘stand’ against ICE or Trump. California must build a system that fights fire with fire,” he wrote.
Steyer says he’ll take on ICE the “same way we took on the mob.”
He laid out a five-point plan that includes a ban on racial discrimination by ICE agents, authority to the state Attorney General to hold ICE leadership accountable, a special unit dedicated towards enforcing ICE-related laws, more legal defense for immigrants, and he’ll launch a statewide public awareness campaign aimed at raising awareness for immigrants’ legal rights.
Steyer says President Donald Trump has turned ICE “into a criminal enterprise.”
“Trump has turned ICE into a criminal enterprise, so let’s treat it as such. As governor, I’ll go after ICE the way Eliot Ness and Joe Friday went after the Mob: bring them to justice by using their most basic crimes against them. For the Mob it was racketeering; for ICE it’s racial discrimination,” he wrote.
“On my watch, California will protect the most vulnerable and bring to justice those who break the law and brutalize our neighbors. We’ll let ICE know: in California, you obey our laws and respect our residents, or you go to jail,” he added.
The specific priorities aimed at ICE come despite Steyer’s past involvement with what he now calls a “criminal enterprise.”
Steyer founded a hedge fund named Farallon Capital Management in 1986. Under his management, the fund put money into CoreCivic, which runs private prisons. Farallon’s shares in the company was valued at $89.1 million at one point.
And two of the prisons that CoreCivic runs include two facilities that house people detained by federal immigration agents — one near San Diego and another in Kern County.
The progressive billionaire said it was a “mistake” to invest into the company.
And two of the prisons that CoreCivic runs include two facilities that house people detained by federal immigration agents — one near San Diego and another in Kern County.
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“We never had anything to do with running the company,” Steyer said. “But it was a mistake to think that that was a place where it was decent to make money.”
He said his involvement with the company led him to walking away from the hedge fund industry.
“It was also a big wake-up call that I was in the wrong place, that I was in a business that was taking me to places I absolutely didn’t want to go,” Steyer said at a March town hall. “And there’s a reason I walked away from that business and walked away from a ton of money.”