Obama
seeks to end immigration enforcement by local, state police, Recommendation
from task force set up in wake of Ferguson riots By
Stephen
Dinan and Ben
Wolfgang - The Washington Times
- Monday, May 18, 2015
The administration
issued a report Monday saying that in order to rebuild trust between police and
their communities, the federal government should stop enlisting state and local
police in most immigration enforcement, setting up another challenge as
President Obama tries to please immigrant rights advocates while carrying out
deportations.
The recommendations
were part of Mr. Obama’s policing task force, set up in the wake of riots last
year in Ferguson, Missouri, to suggest ways federal officials can help local
police do their jobs better. The heart of the report called for curtailing
transfer of heavy weapons and tank-style vehicles to state and local
authorities, but the report also delved into the thorny issue of immigration,
saying government must “decouple” enforcement from local police.
The U.S.
Department of Homeland Security should terminate the use of the state and local
criminal justice system, including through detention, notification, and
transfer requests, to enforce civil immigration laws against civil and
nonserious criminal offenders,” the task force said.
Task force officials
also suggested that the government pay for any enforcement it asks of local
authorities.
The report angered
proponents of an immigration crackdown, who said it was the latest effort by
Mr. Obama and his aides to stop finding illegal immigrants to deport.
“If you’re so worried
about your legal status, or your illegal status, don’t put yourself in a place
or a situation where you’re going to get picked up by the police,” said
Rosemary Jenks, government relations manager at NumbersUSA, which lobbies for
stricter immigration limits.
She questioned the sense
of ignoring illegal immigrants driving without a license or using falsified
documents. “Somehow in this world if you’re an illegal alien, then you can’t be
punished for being an illegal alien,” she said.
Homeland Security
officials already were struggling with those questions under orders from Mr.
Obama, who as part of his expanded deportation amnesty announced in November
said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which handles interior
enforcement and deportations, needs to change its relationship with state and
local police.
As part of those
changes, ICE scrapped its Secure Communities program, which trolled prisons and
jails looking for illegal immigrants to be deported, but which angered dozens
of police departments that said they worried they were being asked to hold
people for pickup, making them complicit in enforcement.
ICE is replacing Secure Communities with what it calls the
Priority Enforcement Program, which will continue to scour prisons and jails
but will assert probable cause, according to draft documents obtained by
advocacy groups.
ICE said it couldn’t
comment on where the Priority Enforcement Program stands because of an ongoing
lawsuit and referred questions about the task force’s recommendations to the
White House.
Mr. Obama traveled to
New Jersey to discuss the report, though he focused chiefly on the military
equipment that local police used to confront protesters in Ferguson last year,
sparking a national debate over whether there was a growing divide between
officers and their communities.
The report said police
need to take steps to rebuild trust, including acknowledging past abuses,
becoming more transparent, hiring racial and cultural minorities and polling to
determine whether they have built solid relationships with their communities.
The report also said
that establishing trust with immigrant communities “is central to overall
public safety.”
That didn’t make sense
to some. Lance LoRusso, a former police officer and Atlanta lawyer, said the
immigration part of the report was “a political statement, not a law
enforcement statement.”
He said an illegal
immigrant who is arrested for a charge that the federal government deems not to
be serious and who gets bonded out of jail is less likely to show up for legal
proceedings because the person is in the country illegally.
The task force report
said its recommendation about halting recruitment of state and local police for
immigration enforcement stemmed from testimony by Maria Teresa Kumar, president
of Voto Latino, an advocacy group.
Voto Latino didn’t
return a message seeking comment on the report, nor did the American Civil
Liberties Union, whose immigrant rights project has challenged federal efforts
to enlist state and local police.
Last week, the ACLU
and the National Day Laborer Organizing Network released draft documents
detailing the Obama administration’s newest plans for working with state and
local police.
According to the
documents, authorities will be asked to hold immigrants for up to 48 hours
after they otherwise would have been released so ICE officers can come pick
them up. Unlike the old system, however, ICE officers would affirm that they
have probable cause for the immigrant to be deported and therefore should be
held.
Jessica Bansal,
litigation director for the organizing network, said the program is still “a
liability trap for unwary local law enforcement agencies, which bear legal
responsibility for detaining individuals on ICE holds.”
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/may/18/obama-seeks-to-end-immigration-enforcement-by-loca/?page=all
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