Fox News Latino (Opinion)
By Marisa Franco
October 21, 2015
The
Department of Justice recently announced a decision to release 6,000
people from federal prison. As part of that announcement, agency
officials noted that 1/3 of the
people released are immigrants who will be quickly deported. There is a
clear and troubling pattern where policy reforms in the criminal
justice system do not extend to immigrants in the criminal justice or
immigration enforcement systems. The glaring question
is: why not?
For
some, a hope for reintegration, while for others no chance whatsoever
because our immigration policy is still grounded in mass
criminalization. It’s time for that
to change.
- Marisa Franco
Whether
because of the human or monetary costs, lack of effectiveness, or the
clear bias that runs rampant, there is a re-examination occurring of the
War on Drugs and
the mass incarceration system. Reforms in these domains, however, are
not being considered in the immigration enforcement system; in fact, the
trend is going in the opposite direction. An act that, for citizens,
may no longer warrant a criminal charge much
less incarceration, for immigrants often means a double punishment of a
harsh prison sentence and possible deportation. Already immigrants
receive harsher sentences inside of the criminal justice system than
citizens.
As
sentencing reform victories are making mandatory minimums increasingly
obsolete, politicians are still proposing the very same approach to
enforce immigration law.
(One bill proposed by Louisiana’s Senator was narrowly defeated on the
hill on Tuesday.) If these policies have proven to be ineffective and
inhumane in drug policy, what makes anyone think they are well suited
for immigration policy?
The
War on Drugs has wreaked havoc both domestically and abroad. Over
40,000 immigrants are deported for drug offenses each year – resulting
in more than one-quarter of
a million people forcibly removed in the past seven years alone. This
double standard, along with hateful rhetoric that targets 'felons not
families', inflicts serious harm on countless communities.
One
recent example of an effort to reform the immigration system through
the lens of criminal justice took place in California, but was thwarted
when Gov. Jerry Brown
vetoed legislation that the L.A. Times called a “new approach [that]
would treat potential citizens the same way full citizens are treated
when it comes to minor drug infractions.” Imagine that – vetoing
legislation that sought to bring Californians one crucial
step closer to treating all people equal under the law.
Meanwhile, thousands of families across the U.S. continue to face the brunt of our draconian drug laws.
In
her groundbreaking report, U.S.: Drug Deportations Tearing Families
Apart, Human Rights Watch Researcher Grace Meng notes that “even as many
U.S. states are legalizing
and decriminalizing some drugs, or reducing sentences for drug
offenses, federal immigration policy too often imposes exile for the
same offenses. Americans believe the punishment should fit the crime,
but that is not what is happening to immigrants convicted
of what are often relatively minor drug offenses.”
Attorney
General Loretta Lynch embodied that double standard in one breath when
she was asked about the planned release of people from prison. She said:
"The
Sentencing Commission made some changes in the way sentences would be
calculated. A number of cases are being referred to judges and it will
be the courts who decide
if and when someone is released. Once that happens, if that happens, we
expect those individuals will hopefully be able to be re-integrated
into society. A vast number of them are not going to stay here; a vast
number of them are eligible for deportation and
will be removed."
For
some, a hope for reintegration, while for others no chance whatsoever
because our immigration policy is still grounded in mass
criminalization. It’s time for that
to change.
As
we near the anniversary of President Obama's immigration executive
action, relief remains elusive at the federal level while millions
remain ensnared in the mass deportation
system. The administration continues to punish immigrants rather than
implement much needed relief and reform.
To
ensure that emerging reforms in criminal justice that reduce prison
populations are not just replaced by immigration policies that fill
them, it’s time for the double
standard to end.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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