!!top!! | Deportation Officer Transition Program (dotp)

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.”

“We know where the bodies are buried,” says Cole, now a DOTP mentor. “I can look at a file and see exactly where an officer might cut corners, where a translation error happened, or where someone was eligible for withholding of removal but never told. That’s not a weapon anymore. It’s a key.” Unsurprisingly, DOTP has its detractors—from both sides of the aisle. deportation officer transition program (dotp)

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For years, the official response was standard Employee Assistance Programs (EAP)—counseling hotlines and stress management webinars. But attrition rates kept climbing. Then, in 2019, a pilot program emerged from an unlikely partnership: ICE’s Office of Professional Responsibility and a coalition of immigrant legal aid groups. On the left, immigrant rights groups are deeply skeptical

For two decades, Jameson Cole wore the badge of a Deportation Officer for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). He spent his days tracking fugitives, escorting flights of removals, and enforcing court-ordered departures. It was a career defined by high stress, moral complexity, and the heavy finality of a gavel. That’s not transition

Cole is a graduate of the —a quiet, controversial, and fascinating experiment in professional reinvention. The Hidden Burnout Crisis Most people assume deportation officers either stay in the role until retirement or burn out and leave law enforcement entirely. But the reality, according to internal DHS surveys, is more nuanced. After five years on the job, nearly 40% of deportation officers report symptoms of severe secondary trauma. The work—separating families, managing detention populations, and witnessing the raw desperation of removal proceedings—takes a unique psychological toll.

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.”