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ERO Enforcement

The broad authority of ICE allows for the identification and removal of dangerous, often recidivist, criminals engaged in crimes such as murder, predatory sexual offenses, narcotics trafficking, alien smuggling, and a host of other crimes that have a profoundly negative impact on our society. The Enforcement Division manages the enforcement initiatives and components through which ERO identifies and arrests removable aliens.

ERO's Enforcement Division comprises the following:

  • Criminal Alien Program (CAP): provides ICE-wide direction and support in the biometric and biographic identification, arrest, and removal of priority aliens who are incarcerated within federal, state, and local prisons and jails, as well as at-large criminal aliens that have circumvented identification.
  • National Fugitive Operations Program (NFOP): established to dramatically expand the agency's efforts to locate, arrest, or otherwise reduce the fugitive alien population in the United States. In 2009, NFOP responsibilities expanded to include the identification, location, and arrest of at-large criminal and previously removed aliens.
  • Priority Enforcement Program (PEP): enables the Department of Homeland Security to work with state and local law enforcement to take custody of individuals who pose a danger to public safety before those individuals are released into our communities.
Matthew T. Albence, Assistant Director, Enforcement Division
Matthew T. Albence
Assistant Director, Enforcement Division, Enforcement and Removal Operations

Matthew T. Albence has served as the Assistant Director for the Enforcement Division of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Washington, D.C., since January 2013. He is responsible for all ERO enforcement programs and initiatives, to include the Criminal Alien Program, the Fugitive Operations Support Center, the National Fugitive Operations Program, the 287(g) Program, and Field Training.

Mr. Albence has over 20 years of federal law enforcement experience. In 1994, he began his career in San Antonio as a Special Agent with the former U.S. Immigration & Naturalization Service (INS), where he conducted investigations of criminal aliens and street gangs, visa fraud, alien smuggling organizations, and worksite enforcement. In 1999, he was promoted to Supervisory Special Agent, at which time he supervised both INS San Antonio’s criminal alien and benefit/document groups.

In 2001, he was assigned to the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) and was attached to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in Bridgeport, CT, where he received numerous commendations for his role in the dismantling of several narcotics trafficking organizations involving foreign-born nationals. In 2002, he was promoted to Deputy Assistant District Director for Investigations with INS Chicago. Upon the creation of ICE in 2003, he was named Associate Special Agent in Charge with the ICE Office of Investigations, and was promoted the following year to Deputy Special Agent in Charge in Detroit. In each of these capacities, he was responsible for the management and oversight of investigations related to criminal violations of immigration and customs laws, to include national security investigations, human smuggling/trafficking, child exploitation/pornography, drug and weapons trafficking, and benefit/document fraud.

In 2006, Mr. Albence became the Unit Chief of the ICE Office of Investigations Training Academy in Glynco, GA, where he oversaw the basic and advanced training for more than 1,000 Special Agents annually. The following year, Mr. Albence joined the Transportation Security Administration Office of Investigations as the Deputy Special Agent in Charge of the South Central Regional Field Office, where he maintained operational responsibility for all investigations within a nine-state area of responsibility.

In 2012, he returned to ICE with the Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations to serve as the Deputy Assistant Director for the Criminal Alien Division, where he was responsible for strategic planning, policy development, budgetary oversight and the deployment of resources to effectively investigate, identify, arrest and remove incarcerated and at-large criminal aliens – including supervising the nationwide deployment of Secure Communities interoperability.

Mr. Albence received a Bachelor of Science degree in Justice from American University and a Master’s Degree in Administration of Justice from the Center for the Study of Crime, Delinquency, and Corrections at Southern Illinois University. He is a member of the Senior Executive Service.