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287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

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Page 1: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

287(g) & Secured Communities

Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Page 2: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

287(g)

Delegation of

Immigration Enforcement toLocal Law Enforcement Agencies

Page 3: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

History of 287(g)

1996 – IIRIRA created the programNot used because of fears that the local law

enforcement would discriminate against immigrants 2001 – Local law enforcement show interest in

participating in 287(g) programs Currently 73 local law enforcement agencies have programs, with 1,000 trained officers. 30 more

agencies are on a waiting list. Over 79,000 people have been identified as undocumented.

2009 – Human rights organizations lobbied the Obama administration to end the program

Page 4: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

287(g)’s Goals

To increase ICE’s enforcement capabilities To identify and remove dangerous

immigrants

Both goals are accomplished by using local law enforcement to investigate, arrest, detain and transport criminal immigrants.

Page 5: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

3 Types of 287(g) Programs

1. Correctional31 of 67 agencies, additional 12 use a joint

correctional/task force program

2. Highway PatrolOnly 3 agencies

3. Task Force/Investigative 24 of 67 agencies, additional 12 use a joint

correctional/task force program

Page 6: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Correctional Programs

Programs in county jails that identify immigrants with criminal convictions or arrests

Example • Maricopa County, AZ• Harris County, TZ• Los Angeles County, CA

Page 7: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Highway Patrol Programs

Programs that stop people for traffic offenses and/or suspected smuggling

Jurisdictions Colorado Department of Safety Alabama State Police Georgia Department of Safety

Page 8: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Task Force/Investigative Programs

Program of officers specially trained in immigration law that work with other officers to investigate crimes

Anti-Terrorist UnitsExamples

• Florida Department of Law Enforcement Floating Alien Criminal Units

Examples• Beaufort County, SC• Collier County, FL• Prince William County, VA

Page 9: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Proponent’s Perspective

Increasing ICE’s ability to identify and remove dangerous immigrants

Programs driven by the needs of local law enforcement

Page 10: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Criticisms

ICE has failed to define program’s objectives or the extent of the officers’ authority, or supervise local agencies.

Local law enforcement agencies use 287(g) to discriminate against immigrant populations, especially Latino communities.

Example – racial profiling in Maricopa County, AZ

Programs target immigrants with minor convictions.

Immigrants experience unwarranted and prolonged detention.

Immigrant communities are afraid to report crimes because they see local law enforcement as part of ICE.

Page 11: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Secured Communities

Another Collaboration between ICE and Local Law Enforcement

Page 12: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Secured Communities’ Purpose

3 Purposes1. Identify criminal aliens through modernized

information sharing

2. Prioritize enforcement actions to ensure apprehension and removal of dangerous aliens

3. Transform criminal alien enforcement processes and systems to achieve lasting results

Page 13: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Identification

Upon arrest and booking, local law enforcement enter an immigrant’s fingerprints into the FBI and ICE databases to learn about the person’s criminal and immigration history.

If the arrested immigrant has a record of an immigration violation, ICE and local law enforcement are immediately notified and can issue a detainer for the person.

A detainer is an ICE request to be notified by the arresting agency before the arrested individual is released.

Page 14: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Prioritization of Crimes

3 Levels of Crimes

Level 1 – individuals with convictions for major drug offenses, murder, manslaughter, rape, robbery, and kidnapping

Level 2 – individuals convicted of minor drug offenses, burglary, fraud, money laundering, and traffic offenses

Level 3 – individuals convicted of other offenses, including resisting an officer

Page 15: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Prioritization Continued

“ICE will focus its efforts on the most dangerous criminal aliens currently charged with, or previously convicted of, the most serious criminal offenses. ICE will give priority to those offenses including, crimes involving national security, homicide, kidnapping, assault, robbery, sex offenses, and narcotics violations carrying sentences of more than one years.”

Secured Communities Fact Sheet, Sept. 1, 2009

Page 16: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Transformation

Unlike 287(g), Secured Communities does not require a MOA between ICE and local law enforcement.

No local law enforcement officers are deputized

ICE has technological presence in local prisons and jails, no physical presence

Page 17: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Criticisms

Human rights groups argue that Secured Communities do not fix the problems of 287(g); they compound them. • Unnecessary or prolonged detention• Racial profiling and pretexual arrests• No complaint mechanism • No oversight or transparency• No data

Page 18: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Unnecessary or Prolonged Detention

Program is focused on identifying immigrants at the arrest stage not the conviction stage. Immigrants may be detained longer as a result.

Once detainer is imposed, an individual cannot be released on bail or recognizance, or because completion of sentence or dismissal of charges.

It is harder for an individual to contest the criminal charges. Although detainers are just requests, jails treat them a

requirement and will not release the individual. Undocumented immigrant will remain in jail until ICE takes

action. Detainer is supposed to be for 48 hours, but ICE violate the

time limit and the individual stays in prolonged detention.

Page 19: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Racial Profiling & Pretexual Arrests

2 Concerns

1. Racial Profiling - Police officers may have an incentive or ability to arrest people based on race and ethnicity

2. Pretextual Arrests - Police officers may arrest people with suspected immigration violations

While little data is available on the implementation of Secured Communities, the Warren Institute’s September 2009 report of ICE’s Criminal Alien Program discovered a dramatic increase of discretionary arrests of Latinos for petty offenses.

Page 20: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

No Complaint Mechanism

ICE does not provide for a complaint or redress procedure for individuals erroneously arrested, identified by DHS databases, or detained by DHS.

Page 21: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

No Oversight or Transparency

Although Secured Communities is new, the program may suffer the lack of ICE oversight of 287(g) programs. No regulations on the implementation of Secured Communities exist. DHS fact sheets and press releases do not mention any requirements for data collection, audits, or oversight.

Page 22: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

No Accurate Data

Because of no requirements for data collection, no one knows about the implementation or effectiveness of Secured Communities.

Local jurisdictions can participate in multiple programs (287(g), CAP, and Secured Communities). When a detainer is issued for an arrested immigrant, it is hard to determine which program produced the detainer.

To determine the effectiveness of and any possible discrimination from, the following are needed:

o Statistics on the crimes for which immigrants are arrestedo Disposition of the underlying criminal caseo Nationality and ethnicity of the arrested immigrants are needed.

Page 23: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

The Chilling Effect of 287(g) & Secured Communities: Fact or Myth

Local law enforcement and the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) reports that Latino communities statistically report crimes at the same levels as non-Latino communities.

However, local law enforcement and CIS have not surveyed to members of Latino and other immigrant communities to see if Secured Communities and 287(g) programs produce a chilling effect on immigrants. Immigrants may not trust local law enforcement because they see local law enforcement as ICE

Conclusion – Without a culturally sensitive survey of members of immigrant communities on how they perceive both types of programs, proponents and opponents will not know if a chilling effect exists.

Page 24: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

For More Information

January 2009 GAO Reportwww.gao.gov/new.items/d09109.pdf

American Immigration Council - Immigration Policy Centerwww.immigrationpolicy.org

American Immigrant Lawyer’s Associationwww.aila.org

ACLUwww.aclu.org

Human Rights Watch www.hrw.org

National Immigration Law Centerwww.nilc.org

Warren Institute, UC Berkeley School of Lawwww.law.berkeley.edu/6838.htm

Page 25: 287(g) & Secured Communities Effective Programs or Discriminatory Practices

Lisa Johnson-Firth, Esq.

Principal

Immigration & Human Rights Law Firm, PLLC

9119 Church Street

Manassas VA 20110

www.immigrantsfirst.com