Police in Trump-supporting towns aid
immigration officials in crackdown
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[November 27, 2017]
By Mica Rosenberg and Reade Levinson
BENSALEM, Pennsylvania (Reuters) - Dozens
of police departments in the United States have been granted new powers,
or are seeking them, to check the immigration status of people they
arrest, aiding President Donald Trump's broad crackdown on people living
in the country illegally.
Since Trump took office in January, 29 departments have joined a special
program under which they are deputized to perform some tasks of
immigration agents, doubling its size in 10 months, according to the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency. And the administration
hopes that is just the beginning.
Documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request show
that the administration has also had contact with scores of additional
jurisdictions about the program, and 38 of those told Reuters in
interviews they have submitted applications for the program or are
potentially interested in joining. [Graphic:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2A115Sm]
The program, known as 287(g), deputizes local officers trained by ICE to
use federal records to vet arrestees they suspect of being in the
country illegally and then turn them over to federal agents if they are.
The Department of Homeland Security has said in the past that police
forces taking part in the program have flagged tens of thousands of
people for deportation.
The broad expansion of the program comes as Trump seeks to accelerate
arrests and deportations of people living in the United States
illegally. The large number of departments expressing interest in the
program has not been previously reported.
Most of the police departments that have joined, or are seeking to join,
the program have relatively small populations, typically fewer than
100,000 residents, with small immigrant populations. In contrast, the
roughly three dozen so-called "sanctuary cities" that have limited their
cooperation on immigration enforcement have a median population of half
a million people and larger foreign-born populations, according to a
Reuters analysis.
Under President Barack Obama, the 287(g) program was downsized and its
funding reduced amid concerns that some participating police departments
were over-zealous in their targeting of Latinos. Critics also said it
eroded trust of police in immigrant communities. By the end of fiscal
year 2016 only 32 agreements were left in place, down from a peak in
2010 when some 70 jurisdictions were participating. Today, 60
departments in 18 states participate.
Three-quarters of the agencies that have already signed 287(g)
agreements or are interested in doing so are in counties that voted for
Trump in 2016, according to a Reuters analysis of electoral data.
ICE would not confirm which jurisdictions had shown interest until they
had signed agreements. An ICE official, who asked not to be named, said
interest increased after Trump took office and signed an executive order
that included expanding support for the program.
TOWN VS CITY
The township of Bensalem, Pennsylvania, just half an hour up the road
from Philadelphia, is one of those hoping to join the 287(g) program.
Fred Harran, director of public safety in the city of 60,000, says that
any immigrant in the country illegally who commits a crime, even a
misdemeanor like shoplifting or possession of a small amount of drugs,
should be considered for deportation, and he welcomes help from ICE.
“If deporting you out of this country when you commit a crime is a tool
at my disposal, you are darn right I am going to use it,” Harran said.
In neighboring Philadelphia, police commissioner Richard Ross Jr. favors
a different approach. Like many police chiefs in large cities with
significant immigrant populations, he wants immigrant residents to feel
comfortable cooperating with authorities to solve crimes.
While Philadelphia and other big cities say they will turn over serious
criminals to ICE, they do not believe local police should be doing the
work of federal immigration agents.
"There's no way in the world that you would want to come forward as a
source of information if you believe you are in jeopardy of being
deported," Ross testified at a court hearing in October. Philadelphia is
suing the Trump administration over its threats to cut federal funding
to sanctuary cities.
In Bensalem, Harran says he first reached out to ICE about joining
287(g) during Obama's presidency. But in 2012, Obama ended the part of
the program he had hoped to join. It had allowed local officers out on
patrol to question and arrest people suspected of violating immigration
laws. Obama left in place the part of the program Trump has now
expanded.
In a February memo, then-Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said ICE
would consider bringing back the discontinued part of the program. An
ICE official familiar with the program said he was "unaware of any plans
right now" to revive it.
[to top of second column] |
Fred Harran, Director of Public Safety for the Bensalem Police
Department, shows an illustration at the police headquarters in
Bensalem, Pennsylvania, U.S., October 26, 2017. Picture taken
October 26, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
MONEY-MAKING OPPORTUNITY?
Once a jurisdiction is approved for the 287(g) program, it
designates local personnel to be trained at a federal facility.
Local jurisdictions pay for travel, housing, and expenses for
officers during training. ICE pays to install its databases and
other technology in local offices for certified officers to use.
Cities not participating in the program can still approach ICE if
they have suspicions about arrestees, but the process can be time
consuming and cumbersome.
Participating jurisdictions also, as part of their agreement with
ICE, have the option of signing separate contracts to house
immigrant detainees for a fee.
"It's an opportunity to make money for a county that is facing
economic hardship," said Chris Kleinberg, the sheriff of Dakota
County, Nebraska. He said it has applied to be part of the program.
Of the 98 jurisdictions that have existing agreements or are
interested in getting them, at least 27 already house people for
ICE, according to ICE data through April 2017.
Some police departments, however, have backed down from their
support of 287(g) in the face of political pressure.
Orange County, the only place participating in program in
California, will end its agreement on Jan. 1 following the passage
of a statewide 'sanctuary bill,' which prevents police from
inquiring about people's immigration status throughout California,
said Ray Grangoff from the sheriff's department.
CONCERNS ABOUT PROGRAM
ICE says the 287(g) program increases the number of immigrants it is
able to deport. A 2010 report from the DHS inspector general said
the program accounted for "a significant portion of nationwide ICE
removal activity." In fiscal year 2008 for example, 287(g) officers
identified 33,831 immigrants for deportation, or 9.5 percent of all
removals during that period, the report said.
Detractors question the program's value.
A 2011 study of seven 287(g) jurisdictions by the Washington-based
nonpartisan think tank Migration Policy Institute found the program
did not target the most serious criminals and led to an increase in
immigrants' mistrust of local authorities. The study found that in
the first 10 months of fiscal year 2010, half of the immigrants
flagged to ICE in the 287(g) jurisdictions had committed
misdemeanors, including immigration violations that are often civil
not criminal offenses.
"Many of the immigrants that are arrested in traffic stops or for
loitering are not the real threats to public safety," said Chris
Rickerd from the American Civil Liberties Union.
In November, the ACLU identified 14 jails and counties applying for
the program as having had problems in the past, including poor
detention conditions or accusations of racial bias.
One such place is Alamance County, North Carolina, which had its
287(g) program terminated in 2012. The Justice Department sued
Sheriff Terry Johnson that year over allegations his office
discriminated against Latinos at traffic stops and checkpoints. At
trial, the department presented evidence that officers used
derogatory terms like "wetback" and "taco eater," which the
sheriff's office denied.
The judge dismissed the case, but in 2016 the county entered into a
settlement with the government to avoid an appeal, committing to
"bias free" policing.
Johnson said in a phone interview that he was contacted by ICE about
rejoining the 287(g) program earlier this year. He applied, and in
March he sent a letter to Tom Homan, the acting director of ICE,
saying it was "one of the best law enforcement programs" he had ever
been involved with during his 45-year career.
(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg and Reade Levinson in Pennsylvania;
Editing by Sue Horton and Ross Colvin)
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