Roughly 200 U.S. Marines were recently deployed to Florida as part of a federal effort to support immigration operations, drawing attention to how military resources are sometimes used in non-combat, domestic roles. Authorized by the Department of Defense under Title 10 of U.S. law, the deployment was designed to assist Immigration and Customs Enforcement strictly with administrative and logistical responsibilities—not law enforcement activities.
According to officials, the Marines’ duties include paperwork processing, data entry, supply coordination, and case-management assistance. They are not involved in arrests, detention, or direct contact with individuals in custody. The goal is to reduce operational backlogs and allow ICE personnel to focus on enforcement tasks that legally require trained immigration officers. Similar administrative support has also been approved through National Guard and reserve units in other high-demand states.