Shortly after the
U.S. Civil War, some states started to pass their own immigration laws, which prompted the
U.S. Supreme Court to
rule in 1876 that immigration was a federal responsibility. The Immigration Act of 1891 established an Office of the Superintendent of Immigration within the
Treasury Department. This office was responsible for admitting, rejecting, and processing all immigrants seeking admission to the United States and for implementing national immigration policy. 'Immigrant Inspectors', as they were called then, were stationed at major U.S. ports of entry collecting manifests of arriving passengers. Its largest station was located on
Ellis Island in New York Harbor. Among other things, a 'head tax' of fifty cents was collected on each immigrant. Paralleling some contemporary immigration concerns, in the early 1900s
Congress's primary interest in immigration was to protect American workers and wages: the reason it had become a federal concern in the first place. This made immigration more a matter of commerce than revenue. In 1903, Congress transferred the Bureau of Immigration to the newly created (now-defunct)
Department of Commerce and Labor, and on June 10, 1933, the agency was established as the
Immigration and Naturalization Service. By July 1941, Justice Department officials had decided that the INS would oversee the internment of enemy aliens
arrested by the FBI should the U.S. enter the war, and immediately after the
attack on Pearl Harbor these plans went into effect. By December 10, three days after the attack, the INS had 1,291
Japanese, 857
German, and 147
Italian nationals in custody. These "enemy aliens," many of whom had resided in the United States for decades, were arrested without warrants or formal charges. They were held in immigration stations and various requisitioned sites, often for months, before receiving a hearing (without the benefit of legal counsel or defense witnesses) and being released, paroled, or transferred to a Department of Justice internment camp. In November 1979, Attorney General
Benjamin Civiletti announced that INS raids would only take place at places of work, not at residences where suspected illegal immigrants were suspected of living. ==List of commissioners==