ICE agents sent to airports to assist TSA as partial shutdown drags on

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Travelers in America’s overstressed airports on Monday spotted Department of Homeland Security personnel, including ICE agents, who have been tasked with assisting Transportation Security Administration workers as they entered another week without pay due to a partial government shutdown.

NBC News confirmed that ICE and DHS officers and agents were at several major airports, including Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport and New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport.

At O’Hare’s Terminal 3, armed DHS agents and officers were seen at a walkway connecting the secured area to the general terminal. An officer manning that area told an NBC News field producer the ICE agents were helping with security and not checking people’s IDs as they passed by.

The callout rate for TSA workers, who have not been paid in weeks, reached a high on Sunday, at 11.76%, according to DHS.

As of Sunday, New Orleans’ Louis Armstrong International Airport had a call-out rate of 42.3%, Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson’s was 41.5% and New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport was 37.4%, a DHS spokesperson said.

The presence of ICE and DHS agents and officers was a popular topic of conversation among passengers and airline workers on a flight from Memphis to Atlanta Monday morning. In one conversation overheard by NBC News, the pilot and flight attendants said they hope ICE agents don’t create more chaos, because “they’re not trained to have the patience we have in this business.”

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