Los Angeles Times
By Kate Linthicum
June 1, 2014
More
than a dozen California counties have stopped honoring requests from
immigration agents to hold potentially deportable inmates beyond the
length of their jail terms,
saying the practice may expose local sheriffs to liability.
In
recent weeks, officials in counties including Los Angeles, San Diego,
Riverside and San Bernardino have stopped complying with so-called ICE
detainers, citing a federal
court ruling in April that found an Oregon county liable for damages
after it held an inmate beyond her release date so she could be
transferred into Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.
The
California counties are among about 100 municipalities across the
country that have stopped the practice since the ruling, according to
the Immigrant Legal Resource
Center, an advocacy group that is tracking the issue.
Analysts
say the changes could impair President Obama's current immigration
enforcement strategy, which relies on collaboration between local law
enforcement authorities
and federal agents.
"It's
very significant because it represents a reduction of the involvement
of local police in federal immigration enforcement," said Hiroshi
Motomura, an immigration
law professor at UCLA. He said the Oregon court ruling had changed the
long-running debate over ICE detainers.
"It's not just political anymore," Motomura said. "It's about liability."
He
and others said the decision of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department to stop complying with the requests was especially
noteworthy, given the large number of
people apprehended via ICE detainers in L.A. County jails each day. The
Los Angeles Police Department is reviewing the Oregon case in weighing
similar changes to its detainer policy, said Assistant Chief Michel
Moore, who oversees the city jails.
Jo
Wideman, executive director of Californians for Population
Stabilization, which advocates for stricter immigration policies, said
her group plans to fight the changes.
"Criminals who should not even be here to begin with should not be
released onto our streets," Wideman said.
ICE
spokeswoman Virginia Kice said the agency hopes local jurisdictions
continue to comply with detainers, which she described as an essential
tool in capturing immigrants
who pose a public safety risk.
"When
law enforcement agencies remand criminals to ICE custody rather than
releasing them into the community, it helps contribute to public safety
and the safety of law
enforcement," Kice said.
Federal
statistics show that more than 33,000 people who were identified by
immigration authorities while in custody in L.A. County have been
deported since August 2009,
when the county first signed on to a federal program known as Secure
Communities.
Under
the program, fingerprints of inmates booked by local law enforcement
authorities are checked against federal immigration databases. ICE
agents use the information
to decide whether to ask police to hold the inmates for up to 48 hours
to give ICE time to take them into custody.
Immigrant
rights advocates have pushed back against detainers with protests and
litigation in recent years, saying they are unconstitutional and have
eroded trust in police
among immigrant communities. Last fall, advocates won a major victory
when Gov. Jerry Brown signed the Trust Act, which instructs local
officials to honor ICE detainers only in cases when inmates have been
charged with or convicted of a serious offense.
The recent changes go beyond that, with counties deciding to stop honoring ICE detainers altogether.
San
Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said he made the decision last week
after consulting with county attorneys about the Oregon lawsuit.
In
that case, an immigrant from Mexico named Maria Miranda Olivares
completed a jail sentence for violating a restraining order but was kept
behind bars for an additional
19 hours on a federal hold at the request of immigration agents, who
eventually took her into custody.
Lawyers
for the county argued in a lawsuit brought by Miranda that the sheriff
was required to hold her. The judge disagreed, saying ICE detainers are
not mandatory and
did not demonstrate probable cause for Miranda to be held. The judge
said the county was liable for damages.
Gore
said his agency felt it was too risky to continue holding inmates for
ICE. Instead he said his agency will notify federal agents when inmates
who have been flagged
for potential immigration violations are released.
"If they want them, they can come and get them," Gore said. "We don't have to hold them for 48 hours."
Sheriffs from several counties, including Orange and Kern, say they will not change their policies relating to ICE detainers.
Lt.
Jeff Hallock, a spokesman for the Orange County Sheriff's Department,
said officials in his agency reviewed the federal court decision and
decided their current policy
was appropriate. He said Orange County operates in compliance with the
Trust Act.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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