Lawmakers pass bills to close ICE detention centers, enhance deportation
protections
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[June 04, 2021]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — Illinois lawmakers passed
bills advanced by the Legislative Latino Caucus that would close the
state’s three immigrant detention centers and strengthen existing
protections against local and federal law enforcement.
The Illinois Way Forward Act, or Senate Bill 667, requires that the
existing agreements between local jails in McHenry, Pulaski and Kankakee
counties and Immigration and Customs Enforcement must end by Jan. 1,
2022. The bill also prohibits any future agreements between ICE and
local governments to “house or detain individuals for federal civil
immigration violations.”
The bill would also strengthen the TRUST Act, or “Transparency and
Responsibility Using State Tools,” which took effect in 2017.
The TRUST Act prohibits state and local law enforcement officials from
detaining “any individual solely on the basis of any immigration
detainer or nonjudicial immigration warrant.”
Under the TRUST Act, state and local police cannot arrest or detain
individuals based on suspected or actual immigration status. It also
prohibits police from holding or detaining people based on ICE arrest
warrants or detainers.
But there are other types of cooperation that local police can engage in
with federal immigration enforcement, such as cooperating in joint
operations with ICE, said Fred Tsao, who is senior policy counsel at the
Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, which lobbied for
this bill.
“They can still transfer people to ICE. They can still give ICE access
to people who are detained in their facilities. They can still give ICE
access to their facilities, and share information with ICE,” Tsao said
in an interview. “So, the intent of this legislation is to further
restrict local police participation and facilitation of those kinds of
activities, short of ICE having a criminal warrant.”
Local police can still participate in and cooperate with ICE if the case
involves a criminal offense, Tsao said.
“But if it's purely a civil immigration situation, then local police
cannot touch that,” he said.
SB 667 would also empower the state attorney general’s office to
investigate violations of the TRUST Act and enforce compliance through
local courts.
Under the current law, the mechanism to enforce the TRUST Act is to have
an injured party bring the lawsuits themselves in county court.
“That can be really difficult and really expensive and time consuming.
And it places the burden on the person who was hurt by the behavior. And
if this is a pattern and practice on the part of the law enforcement
agency, that would mean multiple different actions that would have to
proceed separately,” Tsao said.
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Led by Rep. Aaron Ortiz, D-Chicago, members of the
Illinois Legislative Latino Caucus speak at a news conference May 27
at the Illinois State Capitol to unveil their legislative agenda for
the remainder of the session. (Capitol News Illinois file photo by
Jerry Nowicki)
“Empowering the attorney general to be able to
investigate, to request documents, to really get to the bottom of
such practices, and then to enable them to seek remedial action is a
very important step in making sure that these laws get complied
with.”
Similar legislation offering protections for immigrants and phasing
out immigrant detention centers were passed recently in California
and Washington state.
“We are hoping that this bill will provide a model or template for
other states to pick up, as they're moving legislation forward and
trying to provide protections for their local communities,” Tsao
said.
In addition to SB 667, the House and Senate extended Medicaid
coverage to noncitizens between ages 55 and 64 in Senate Bill 2017.
Current law provides Medicaid coverage for noncitizens who are 65
and older.
The legislature also passed House Bill 2790 to allow attorneys from
the Cook County Public Defender’s Office to represent noncitizens in
federal immigration court.
The purpose of HB 2790 was to ensure there are no conflicts arising
from jurisdictional issues, such as lawsuits against the county to
prevent or prohibit public defenders from representing clients in
federal immigration court, said Irakere Picon, a lead organizer of
the Defenders for All Coalition and director of legal services at
the Illinois Business Immigration Coalition.
“We're very excited as advocates to ensure that we get to the point
where somebody who is being detained and has to represent themselves
in immigration court, someone who doesn’t speak English as a first
language, doesn't have to do that by themselves,” Picon said.
The bills have passed both chambers of the General Assembly and will
be sent to Gov. JB Pritzker.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |