because of his daughters. what are they going to do? reporter: ice said they would rather detain these men while they were in jail but judges have ruled in several cases their use was unconstitutional. our preference would be to take these individuals into custody in a secured environment to some law enforcement facility. reporter: instead arrests happen at their homes in public or at work. in the communities, any talk of deportation leads to view. remova removals, deported in front of their kids. families are frightful that those with no criminal record could be deported. what about people with families here? that s an unfortunate consequence of our immigration laws, right? we don t make the laws. our job is to enforce them. reporter: marin says the laws
we went along with some of those teams. i.c.e. says their arrests are up and they are targeting criminals in particular so we went along on one of those operations to see how it works and while we were with them, we saw one immigrant family turn i.c.e. agents away with a single red card. check it out. on any given day in los angeles, the first immigration arrests happen before the sun comes up. nine teams loik this responsible spanning southern california with lists of immigrants with criminal hes toistories targete deportation. what we are doing again, it s happening all this morning, targeted enforcement operations. reporter: agents waiting for this man to walk out the door before moving in. david marin is field office director for i.c.e. and enforced
detroit you re going to be successful. in a way, david marin is one of the people investing in detroit. the pulitzer prize winning journalist from the washington post to its knees. this is about a period in the early 1960s from the fall of 62 to the spring of 64 when detroit was magical. it was when motown was booming. the first motortown review left from right here that fall the same week that the detroit auto show introduced the 1963 cars that sold more than ever before. so you have the middle class, labor, civil rights, cars, and you have motown all coming out of here. at that moment you can see the shadows. everybody is in this together. your book feels like a part of that trying to shine this light
box, kristin welker is tracking the veep at the white house. carrie dan has much more on the big new poll. katy tur is with the trump campaign down in south carolina, and luke russert is on capitol hill with the latest on the race for speaker of the house. but let s start with how close the vice president may be to a decision. sources telling nbc news that we could hear something within the next two days. several of biden s self-imposed deadlines for jumping into the race, of course, have already come and gone, and that could happen again here. questions loom over how strong the vp s backing would be if he gets in the race. over the weekend, he spoke with the president of a major firefighters union. if biden does reach a decision by thursday, it will come just as hillary clinton sits down in the extreme spotlight of testifying to the house benghazi committee. a democratic congressman from pennsylvania, meanwhile, said today that his sources say that biden will join the race.
us to get lucky. geoffrey thomas brings up a very good point. and, you know, smart minds have been saying this. listen, we all get excited and think we re going to find something the next minute. oh, my gosh that. finding? the debris and objects and what have you. but for calmer minds, cooler heads, they have been saying to us calm down. this could take years to find anything. geoffrey brings up good point. david marin brought up a good point last week that it could take two years. the average investigation takes 3.5 years to find. so the six-hour delay is not good because every moment counts here. but when you hear than and it takes three days to get out there, michael kay, are you confident about this search? the prime minister certainly is. but we re losing time here. it goes back to the expectation point. and what i d like to just mention is full credit to the