"The federal government has failed in its responsibility to secure our southern border, leaving states to fend for themselves," Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said after signing a legislative package Friday to address illegal immigration.
One of the laws, SB 1036, increases the penalties for crimes committed by immigrants who illegally re-entered the country after having been deported. The law increases the previous sentence of five years behind bars (a third-degree felony) to 15. A 15-year sentence (a second-degree felony) will increase to 30 and a 30-year sentence (a first-degree felony) automatically goes up to life imprisonment.
The law also toughens penalties for collaborating with drug cartels. Sentences will also be reclassified in a similar way.
A second law, HB 1451, bans both cities and counties in Florida from accepting identity cards issued by other jurisdictions to immigrants who have crossed the border illegally.
A third, HB 1589, raises the penalty for anyone convicted of driving without a license. Although the latter does not directly target undocumented immigrants, it does include them. A previous regulation prohibits them from obtaining driver's licenses and even considers those obtained in other states to be invalid.
Last year, I signed the toughest anti-illegal immigration legislation in the country. Today, I signed three more bills to build on the work we have done to protect Floridians from the impacts of the border crisis. pic.twitter.com/oZHpYvyzFR
— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) March 15, 2024
A new front
In his speech on Friday, DeSantis also revealed that state law enforcement had intercepted a boat of Haitian immigrants hiding firearms and drugs.
On February 29, two officers from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission intercepted a 42-foot boat with 25 people, five of them unaccompanied minors, which had sailed from Haiti. They also found the vessel operator, an American citizen, armed.
"They had firearms, they had drugs, they had night vision gear and were boating very recklessly, which would potentially endanger other folks," said the governor, who also said that the detainees had been handed over to federal authorities, who, he insisted, should take charge of these operations.
BREAKING: Gov. Ron DeSantis announces Florida agents have interdicted a vessel that had 25 suspected illegal aliens from Haiti
"They had firearms, they had drugs [...] That vessel was interdicted [and] those illegal aliens were turned over to the Coast Guard for deportation." pic.twitter.com/LIRBuEwFiO
— Florida’s Voice (@FLVoiceNews) March 15, 2024
A coalition of criminal gangs led by Jimmy "Barbecue" Cherizier has flooded Haiti's streets with violence in recent weeks. The crisis prompted the United States to evacuate part of its embassy and deploy an anti-terrorist unit on Haitian soil to assist U.S. citizens still there, as well as to "ensure a peaceful transition of power."
Authorities are concerned about a possible increase in the influx of immigrants from the country. Last Tuesday, the Coast Guard repatriated 65 Haitians.
Two days later, DeSantis blamed the Biden administration for not fulfilling its mission to defend the border and announced he was deploying more than 200 officers and soldiers.
"We've got an incredible amount of resources that are now on display," the former candidate for the Republican nomination said in his Friday speech. "Coast Guard does by and large a good job, but they're undermanned, they are under-resourced, so we're filling those gaps."