A new weekly report created by executive order is exposing sanctuary cities that refuse to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, as well as the illegal immigrant criminals they’re releasing back into communities across the country.

The new ICE report, created through an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in January, detailed 206 “declined detainers” entered into the agency’s database between January 28 and February 3, KTLA reports.

The ICE detainers are requests by the federal government to hold an illegal immigrant that has been arrested for 48 hours after they’ve been processed to give federal officials time to pick up those who deserve to be deported.

The Weekly Declined Detainer Outcome Report shows the most declined detainers come from 10 counties in eight different states, including Clark County, Nevada with 51; Nassau County, New York with 38; Cook County Illinois with 13; Montgomery County, Iowa with 12; Snohomish County, Washington with 12; Franklin County, New York with nine; Washington County, Oregon with seven; and Alachua County, Florida; Franklin County, Iowa; and Franklin County, Pennsylvania with five each.

The report also details the jurisdictions and crimes of each of the 206 illegal immigrants local officials refused to hold for federal authorities that were entered into the ICE system during the week of January 28 through February 3.

The crimes included convictions and charges that included domestic violence, assault, burglary, driving under the influence, arson, drug possession, dangerous drugs, forgery, traffic offenses, weapons possession, possession of obscene material, intimidation, homicide, indecent exposure, fraud, flight to avoid prosecution and other offenses.

The declined detainers involved illegal immigrants from more than a dozen countries, though vast majority were from Mexico. Others hailed from Cambodia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Venezuela, Honduras, Equator, India, Tonga, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Cuba, Columbia, and Vietnam.

“This is an effort for us to be transparent with regards to how we conduct our enforcement operations and the public safety from those agencies that don’t cooperate with those enforcement efforts,” an unnamed senior official at the Department of Homeland Security told the media in a conference call.

KTLA notes that some jurisdictions have claimed the ICE detainers are illegal because they require local officials to hold illegal immigrant criminals beyond what’s outlined in criminal law, though DHS officials disagree.

“You’re a law enforcement agency; you have an obligation, I would say, to find a way to make it work,” the DHS official said. “You don’t release a person from your custody if ICE is looking for them. If your legal shop tells you can’t hold them, you find a way, you get to yes to protect the safety and security of your community.

“And that’s the fundamental problem we’re facing today, and that’s why this report is so important,” the official said.

Federal officials had halted detainer requests to law enforcement agencies that have repeatedly rejected the orders, but resumed the effort regardless of outcome to better document those that are uncooperative.

From January 28 through February 3, ICE issued a total of 3,083 detainer requests. It’s currently unclear how many of those will be declined due to a lag in reporting, according to the news site.

Philadelphia Councilwoman Helen Gym told KTLA city police force ICE to “get a warrant” if federal officials want locals to detain an illegal immigrant criminal because she contends the federal agency is “incredibly sloppy” and  “exploit” local resources to work on its behalf.

“This is not something that counties just come up with off the top of our heads,” Gym said. “They were born out of real experiences and problems that we’ve had in doing ICE’s work for them. And ICE has to stop being so lazy and sloppy with their work and follow procedures that law enforcement does if they believe there’s someone dangerous on the street.”