US Homeland Security chief sees no need to stop international flight processing at Newark Airport
WASHINGTON, June 1 (Reuters) - U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said on Monday he does not need to halt international flight processing at โNew Jersey's Newark Liberty International Airport, citing cooperation from state and local law โenforcement o
WASHINGTON, June 1 (Reuters) - U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said on Monday he does not need to halt international flight processing at โNew Jersey's Newark Liberty International Airport, citing cooperation from state and local law โenforcement officials near a detention center.
"As long as we continue to have this partnership with local and state law โenforcement, then there'll be no need to do so," Mullin said at a press conference in Dallas.
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill on Friday ordered state police to assume control outside a migrant detention center in Newark that had become a weeklong flashpoint for clashes between protesters and federal Immigration โand Customs Enforcement agents.
Sherrill, a Democrat, โ said she was acting to quell escalating tensions and episodes of violence outside Delaney Hall, the 1,000-bed jail operated by the private company Geo โ Group.
Mullin again acknowledged he had a plan to pull customs agents from the airport to assist with security efforts at Newark Airport - a major United Airlines hub outside New York City - but said it โwas โnot currently needed because of efforts by state and โlocal law enforcement.
On Thursday, Mullin had โwarned that the Trump administration could soon stop processing international travelers and cargo at Newark Airport. Major airline, travel and business groups on Friday warned that barring border processing at Newark Airport or other major U.S. airports could lead to chaos, strand thousands of tourists and Americans trying to get home, and prevent crucial cargo shipments.
Mullin has repeatedly said he could also halt โimmigration processing at more than a dozen other airports โin so-called sanctuary cities, including Boston, Denver, Philadelphia, Chicago, โLos Angeles, Seattle and San Francisco.
Shutting โdown all international flights in the 18 airports serving the sanctuary cities would โresult in a more than $70 billion hit โto the economy and โimpact 68 million international passengers per year, the U.S. Travel Association said.

