The Obama administration on Friday announced a policy change that — if it works — should lead to smarter enforcement of the immigration laws, with greater effort spent on deporting dangerous felons and less on minor offenders who pose no threat.The Times' Christmas-Day editorial supporting the rules adjustment concluded:
The new policy places stricter conditions on when Immigration and Customs Enforcement sends requests, known as detainers, to local law-enforcement agencies asking them to hold suspected immigration violators in jail until the government can pick them up. Detainers will be issued for serious offenders — those who have been convicted or charged with a felony, who have three or more misdemeanor convictions, or have one conviction or charge for misdemeanor crimes like sexual abuse, drunken driving, weapons possession or drug trafficking. Those who illegally re-entered the country after having been deported or posing a national-security threat would also be detained. But there would be no detainers for those with no convictions or records of only petty offenses like traffic violations.
As the Obama Administration has ramped up deportations to historic levels, the sheer volume of federal immigration cases has invited error, not to mention more mundane, but still important, workaday injustices caused by delays in backlogged federal courts. I'm relieved to see some common sense injected into what has been a highly politicized program.Some cities and states have resisted cooperating with ICE detainers for the very reasons of proportionality and public safety that [ICE] cited on Friday. California’s attorney general, Kamala Harris, told her state’s law enforcement agencies this month that ICE had no authority to force them to jail minor offenders who pose no threat.Secure Communities and indiscriminate detainers have caused no end of frustration for many police officials, who rely on trust and cooperation in immigrant communities to do their jobs. They know that crime victims and witnesses will not cooperate if every encounter with the law carries the danger of deportation. They have shied away from a federal role that is not theirs to take.ICE’s announcement seems to make those efforts unnecessary. It puts the Obama administration on the same page as states and cities that have tried to draw a brighter line between their jobs and the federal government’s. A stricter detainer policy is better for police and sheriffs, who can focus more on public safety. It makes people less vulnerable to pretextual arrests by cops who troll for immigrants with broken taillights. And it helps restore some sanity and proportion to an immigration system that has long been in danger of losing both.
The implications of the new rules for those managing county jails are important: They "do not require a detainer in each case," which is how too many Texas Sheriffs have been operating, and now Sheriffs may only place ICE holds on jail prisoners:
where (1) they have reason to believe the individual is an alien subject to removal from the United States and (2) one or more of the following conditions apply:A revised I-247 detainer form is being issued by the feds to reflect the new criteria, so local Sheriffs will have to change their procedures as well. Moreover, some in local law enforcement will need to shift their expectations; Grits has seen numerous anecdotal reports of police arresting illegal immigrants over traffic violations who ended up facing deportation proceedings, and I've suspected in some cases that was the arresting officer's goal - that a US citizen wouldn't have faced arrest under the same circumstance, were it not for the willingness of the Secure Communities program to deport people even based on the flimsiest or pettiest criminal charges. Maybe that now will change.
• the individual has a prior felony conviction or has been charged with a felony offense;
• the individual has three or more prior misdemeanor convictions;
• the individual has a prior misdemeanor conviction or has been charged with a misdemeanor offense if the misdemeanor conviction or pending charge involves-
o violence, threats, or assault;• the individual has been convicted of illegal entry pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1325;
o sexual abuse or exploitation;
o driving under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance;
o unlawful flight from the scene of an accident;
o unlawful possession or use of a firearm or other deadly weapon;
o the distribution or trafficking of a controlled substance; or
o other significant threat to public safety;
• the individual has illegally re-entered the country after a previous removal or return;
• the individual has an outstanding order of removal;
• the individual has been found by an immigration officer or an immigration judge to have knowingly committed immigration fraud; or
• the individual otherwise poses a significant risk to national security, border security, or public safety.
Notably, a footnote to the new rules states specifically that, "Given limited enforcement resources, three or more convictions for minor traffic misdemeanors or other relatively minor misdemeanors alone should not trigger a detainer unless the convictions reflect a clear and continuing danger to others or disregard for the law." [Emphasis added.] That addresses the biggest problems with the law, though obviously now the debate shifts to what is a "relatively minor" misdemeanor? Is that just Class Cs, here in Texas, for which the maximum punishment is only a fine? Does it includes offenses in higher categories where the Legislature gave police authority to write tickets instead of arrest? How about non-violent Class B or A misdemeanors? ¿Quien sabe? One can't tell from the documents linked above. So there is still some local discretion afforded in the rules, which is all the more reason for local jailers to begin revamping their own policies in light of this new ICE guidance.
10 comments:
>for many police officials, who rely on trust and cooperation in immigrant communities.
Trust and cooperation is for white communities. Army of occupation and deportation is for immigrant communities.
There are better ways to spend time and resources than chasing after immigrants that pose no threat.
What is wrong with locking up mexicans and getting rid of them? Oh, but you say, Mexicans are so important for the economy. Really? Who built the interstate highways before there were Mexicans? And how many mexicans have been on the moon? We don't need illegal mexicans here and they all need to go away.
What we need are those big scoop things like they used in Soylent Green!
Yep, financial and economical decisions always trump rule of law issues. These dumb bastards in Washington should not enact laws they have no intention of enforcing.
Don't deport anyone; everyone get's a trophy in today's way of doing things.
12:30, what in heaven's name are you talking about? Deportations under the Obama Administration are at historic levels.
HJ, there are fantasy football leagues more relevant than your ridiculous opinions. There may not have been many Mexicans on the moon, but there's a good bet the fruits and vegetables in your refrigerator wouldn't be there without them. You suggest "getting rid of" 12 million people? Please offer a realistic answer to the question "how?" that doesn't involve turning the country into a Stalinist-style police state. And explain why eliminating 12 million consumers wouldn't decimate the economy. You'd have the country cut of its own nose to spite its (increasingly brown) face.
^ Ever been in a collision with one with no DL and insurance? Then seeing that same person driving again?
That's gett'n a trophy!
7:19, the government forbids undocumented immigrants from getting a driver's license, without which they can't get insurance, so blame lawmakers for that problem. If I order my kid to mow the lawn but ban him from using the lawnmower, I'm to blame for the conundrum, not the youth.
Those who don't commit felonies can stay. That's open borders.
7:10, you're talking about people who are here already, most of whom have been here for years. That has nothing to do with whether the border is "open" today when the Obama Administration has spent billions beefing up the border patrol, ICE, etc.. The issues are apples and oranges.
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