Noem has appointed Todd Lyon as acting director and Madison Xiahan as assistant director.
Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Christie Noem on Sunday appointed a new leadership in the US Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) and said he will continue to use polygraph tests to identify information leaks within the department.
Noem has appointed Todd Lyon as acting director and Madison Xiahan as assistant director. Lyons is currently acting as the acting executive associate director of the ICE execution and removal business.
According to DHS, Lyons is the former assistant director of field operations for Ice’s Enforcement and Removal Operations division, overseeing 25 field offices and domestic operations throughout the United States.
He also served as field office director at the Boston Field Office, where he oversaw ICE enforcement activities in Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Vermont.
Before joining ICE, Lions served in the US Air Force in 1993 and began his civil law enforcement career in Florida in 1999. He became an immigration enforcement agent in Dallas in 2007.
Xiahan is currently the secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, and Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry advises as a member of the state cabinet in this role and a member of the Uniform Command Group.
Xiahan previously worked for NOEM when the DHS secretary was the governor of South Dakota.
DHS identifying information leaks
The appointment of a new leadership comes when NOEM vows to find and prosecute people who may be leaking information to the media about their immigration enforcement business.
Noem told CBS on Sunday that DHS will continue to use polygraph tests to identify responsible personnel who leak information and endanger the safety of law enforcement officials.
“The authorities I have under the Department of Homeland Security are broad and wide, and I plan to use all of them to make sure we are following the law.
In an interview with CBS, Noem said the two were leaking plans for enforcement activities “in some cities.”
The agency has stepped up its crackdown on illegal immigration following President Donald Trump’s enforcement actions aimed at deterring illegal immigration in the country.
Naveen Athrappulary contributed to this report.