Associated Press
By Erica Werner
April 21, 2014
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson is weighing limiting
deportations of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally who don't have
serious criminal
records, according to two people with knowledge of his deliberations.
The
change, if adopted following an ongoing review ordered by President
Barack Obama, could shield tens of thousands of immigrants now removed
each year solely because
they committed repeat immigration violations, such as re-entering the
country illegally after having been deported, failing to comply with a
deportation order or missing an immigration court date.
However,
it would fall short of the sweeping changes sought by activists. They
want Obama to expand a two-year-old program that grants work permits to
certain immigrants brought here illegally as children to include other groups, such as the
parents of any children born in the U.S.
John
Sandweg, who served until February as acting director of U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said he had promoted the policy
change for immigrants without serious
criminal records before his departure and that it was being weighed by
Johnson. An immigration advocate who's discussed the review with the
administration also confirmed the change was under consideration. The
advocate spoke on condition of anonymity because
the proceedings are confidential.
"Any
report of specific considerations at this time would be premature,"
Clark Stevens, a spokesman for the Homeland Security Department, said
Monday. Stevens said Johnson
"has undergone a very rigorous and inclusive process to best inform the
review," including seeking input from people within DHS as well as
lawmakers of both parties, and other stakeholders.
The
approach outlined by Sandweg and the immigration advocate would change
the existing priority categories that now include immigrants who've
re-entered the country after
they have been deported previously, and those who are fugitives from
immigration proceedings. Such people would be taken off the priority
list.
The
remaining priority categories focus on recent border-crossers and
immigrants who pose a danger to national security or public safety or
who've been convicted of crimes.
Some of those categories might also be refined or changed, and others
could be added.
"The
time had come to focus ICE's efforts exclusively on public safety and
national security," Sandweg said in explaining why he pushed for the
change prior to his departure
from the agency. He estimated that some 20,000 deported immigrants fell
into the categories in question last year.
The
potential changes come as Johnson proceeds with a review ordered by
Obama on how to make deportation policy more humane. With comprehensive
immigration legislation
stalled in the GOP-led House after passing the Senate last year, Obama
has come under intense election-year pressure to stem deportations,
which have neared 2 million on his watch, and allow more of the 11.5
million immigrants living illegally in the U.S.
to stay.
Many
activists, who've staged hunger strikes on the National Mall and
outside the White House, want sweeping action by Obama to give legal
certainty and work permits to
millions more immigrants, like he did for those who arrived illegally as children and attended school or served in the military.
It's
not clear whether the administration ultimately will take such steps.
Obama has said repeatedly his options are limited without action by
Congress and has sought
to keep the onus on House Republicans.
"The
only way to truly fix it is through congressional action. We have
already tried to take as many administrative steps as we could," Obama
said last week at a news
conference. "We're going to review it one more time to see if there's
more that we can do."
For
now, administration officials appear more focused, instead, on more
limited, near-term steps that could still make a difference for the
immigrant population, according
to lawmakers and activists who've met with administration officials.
Adjusting
the department's priorities for deportation is one such approach.
Depending on how it's done, it could have a significant impact by
providing new guidance to
ICE agents on the front lines. Activists want more wholesale changes;
some say ICE agents don't always follow the priorities set by the
administration.
"I
think that is a step in the right direction, but not enough," said
Gustavo Torres, executive director of CASA de Maryland, an immigrant
service organization. "We believe
the president has the authority to stop deportations" of larger groups
of people.
At
the same time, Obama would likely face GOP wrath for taking even the
smallest steps toward providing relief to people in this country
illegally. Republicans already
accuse Obama's administration of subverting the law through previous
moves to give "prosecutorial discretion" to immigration agents.
"We're
already at a point where deportations are in a state of collapse and to
go further would be exactly the wrong thing to do," said Sen. Jeff
Sessions, R-Ala.
The
Obama administration's deportation priorities have been controversial,
with the administration contending they're meant to keep the focus on
criminals. Immigration
activists argue that in reality, many people with a minor criminal
record or no record are swept up.
Advocates
say part of the problem is that, although criminals are prioritized,
people with no criminal record or a minor record can be removed if
they've gotten caught
up in the immigration system.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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