The departments of Homeland Security and Justice released a report today showing that three out of four people convicted of international terrorism-related offenses between September 11, 2001, and the end of 2016 were foreign-born.

What was missing: While the report's press release tied it to President Trump’s national security concerns on immigration reform, a senior administration official speaking in a background briefing failed to connect the foreign-born terrorism convictions with programs like the diversity visa lottery program and "chain migration." The official stated that DOJ and DHS did not yet have the details surrounding those individuals’ manner of entry into the U.S.

The senior administration official also could not provide information regarding the education or job skill level of those foreign-born individuals convicted of international terrorism-related offenses, calling it "an interesting issue to analyze in a future iteration."

That information would be a key component of the individuals' ability to enter the U.S. under Trump’s proposed merit-based immigration program.

The timing: The report was mandated under Trump's travel ban executive order, which required the release of this report within 180 days — with an updated iteration every 180 days thereafter. This should have placed its initial release in mid-September.

While a senior administration official stated that the late release was “an indication of the amount of work that had to go on” and "merely coincidental," it’s noteworthy that the Trump administration chose to put it out now at the height of the DACA debate.

By the numbers, from the report: