Tag: tricia mclaughlin
Tricia McLaughlin

Departing DHS Spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin Leaves A Stain Of 'Heinous Lies'

Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin, often named as one of Donald Trump's most loyal defenders, is leaving her office later this month, with an analysis from The Bulwark finding that she leaves behind a pattern of "heinous lies" made in the face of "horrifying tragedies."

McLaughlin is set to leave her position on February 27, with various reports noting that her exit comes as her boss, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, is facing increasingly bipartisan heat over her own performance. The DHS flack had reportedly been plotting her departure around the end of last year, but delayed it after the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal immigration officers.

It was on the subject of those recent deaths that McLaughlin shared the first two major lies highlighted by The Bulwark. During media appearances, she perpetuated the claims from her superiors, including controversial Trump adviser Stephen Miller, the Good had been involved in "domestic terrorism" and that Pretti, who had been lawfully carrying a gun right before his death, intended to "massacre law enforcement." The Bulwark noted that, unlike her bosses, McLaughlin did not back away from these unfounded claims.

"Although McLaughlin helped build this false and slanderous narrative that even hardliners like Miller have abandoned, she herself has refused to renounce her office’s extreme—and baseless—claims about Pretti," The Bulwark's analysis detailed, later adding, "And just as in the case of the Pretti killing, McLaughlin refused to give up her lies. When CNN’s Wolf Blitzer asked her about the administration’s repeated characterization of Renee Good as a domestic terrorist, calling it 'outrageous,' McLaughlin doubled down, saying, 'It was an act of domestic terrorism. In no way is that outrageous.'”

McLaughlin also asserted that ICE agents were not restraining people using zip ties, which she called a "disgusting smear," wvwn though photos later emerged from an FBI-led operation in Idaho showing a teenage American citizen restrained with them. The outlet noted that, on this count, there is the possibility that McLaughlin was correct in a way, as the zip ties could have been administered by FBI agents or local law enforcement officers.

"But even if children were being zip-tied by FBI agents or local law enforcement officers or some other DHS personnel instead of ICE during this particular raid, it’s not as though they are being spared from the cruelty of the administration’s mass deportation efforts," the analysis argued.

The Bulwark further highlighted McLaughlin's claims that Trump's mass deportation agenda was only targeting "the worst of the worst," and that DHS was making sure to use "U.S. taxpayer dollars well." The former claim, often invoked by Trump as well to defend his plans, has been consistently rebuked by reports about the many non-criminal immigrants being taken by ICE. As of October, one estimate found that 73 percent of ICE detainees had no criminal record at all, and only 8 percent had a history of committing violent crime.

The latter claim about spending came during an interview about DHS painting Trump's prized border wall black, to make it hotter to the touch for those trying to climb it.

"That makes a lot of sense—so long as you completely discount the existence of gloves, ladders, and the nighttime," The Bulwark noted, later adding, "If this is what responsible stewardship of taxpayer dollars looks like, what would irresponsible stewardship entail?"

Reprinted with permission from Alternet


How Fox News Feeds Fake Data On Migrant Arrests To Gullible Viewers

How Fox News Feeds Fake Data On Migrant Arrests To Gullible Viewers

Right-wing media have worked symbiotically with President Donald Trump’s administration to manufacture false media narratives of immigrant criminality and to justify subsequent crackdowns on those communities. A recent segment on Fox Business’ Mornings With Maria Bartiromo perfectly illustrates this dynamic, as guest host Cheryl Casone enabled a Homeland Security spokesperson to uncritically spread a baseless statistic to bolster the administration’s claim that it’s pursuing the so-called “worst of the worst.”

This segment exemplifies how Fox feeds garbage anti-immigrant slop to its audience www.mediamatters.org

On August 4, Casone introduced Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary for public affairs Tricia McLaughlin by discussing legal challenges Trump has faced in carrying out his mass deportation plans.

“What is the path forward here from the legal side, from the attorneys at DHS, to make sure that these deportations continue to be carried out as the American public had asked for?” Casone said.

(This framing is already misleading — in mid-July, polls from CNN and CBS News both found that a majority of respondents oppose the administration’s increased deportation program.)

After assuring the Fox Business’ audience that Trump’s targeting of immigrants had nothing to do with “racial animus,” McLaughlin moved on to what has become a common administration talking point to claim Trump’s policies “are focused on criminality.”

(Meanwhile, DHS recently asked the Supreme Court to allow ICE agents to use factors like speaking Spanish or working in construction as a partial basis for reasonable suspicion that a person is in the country without authorization.)

“Seventy percent of those illegal aliens who have been arrested under the Trump administration either have criminal convictions or pending criminal charges,” McLaughlin said. “So we are focused on getting people like MS-13 gang members, Tren de Aragua, terrorists, murderers, rapists — the worst of the worst out of this country.”

“We will keep on going, flooding the zone in sanctuary cities, and going after the worst of the worst,” she added.

The data point that McLaughlin cited — which Casone didn’t challenge — appears to have first been used in a DHS press release on June 26. DHS has used the statistic in at least seven press releases since then, and Trump “border czar” Tom Homan — the most frequent administration official to appear on the Fox networks since Trump's inauguration — has repeated it numerous times across right-wing media.

As Media Matters previously reported, the statistic appears to be false based on independent sources that collect federal data.

According to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, which is frequently cited in media and legal publications for collecting government data, “71.1% [of detainees] held in ICE detention have no criminal conviction according to data current as of July 27, 2025. Many of those convicted committed only minor offenses, including traffic violations.” TRAC further notes that just 24% of ICE detainees had pending criminal charges as of July 13.

Reports from CBS News and The Associated Press have found comparable numbers.

When Homan has recently claimed that 70 percent of ICE arrestees are criminals, he has sometimes added that the remaining 30 percent are “national security threats.” This figure appears to be the product of his own imagination. In some of statements, he has lumped in immigrants with final orders of removal alongside so-called terrorists and gang members to pad his statistic.

A CBS News report last month found that since the beginning of Trump’s second term, “3,256 of the more than 100,000 people removed were known or suspected gang members or terrorists.” That’s about three percent — not 30 percent — and databases that purport to list “terrorists” or “gang members” are notoriously inaccurate.

A news outlet that was interested in giving its audience reliable information might include any of that context when interviewing a Trump administration immigration official, but that's not the role Fox was created to serve.

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

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