Albuquerque Journal

NM shouldn’t bow to Sessions’ threats

Detaining people based on suspicion is unconstitu­tional

- BY PETER SIMONSON EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, ACLU OF NEW MEXICO

On March 27, the American people witnessed something remarkable: the country’s Top Cop went on national TV and demanded that our state and local officials violate the constituti­on — or else. Attorney General Jeff Sessions threatened to cut off federal crimefight­ing funds from so-called “sanctuary cities” that refuse to honor immigratio­n hold requests from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE). These immigratio­n hold requests, often called “ICE Detainers,” ask local jails and prisons to detain certain people up to 48 hours beyond their original release date, not including holidays or weekends, so they can investigat­e their immigratio­n status. So what’s wrong with that? To start off with, imprisonin­g someone after they’ve served out their sentence or posted bond is unconstitu­tional. Detaining someone beyond their release date is essentiall­y a second arrest, and for that you need to have probable cause to believe that the person has committed a second crime. However, ICE detainers are often based on nothing more substantia­l than a suspicion that a person might be undocument­ed, which is not a crime in and of itself. In America, we don’t arbitraril­y imprison people based on mere suspicions — we require evidence and due process. Federal courts across the country have affirmed this principle many times over.

We’ve already seen negative outcomes from ICE detainers right here in New Mexico. Just five days before AG Sessions delivered his televised threats, a federal judge approved a settlement stemming from the illegal detention of a Farmington woman in the San Juan Detention Center per the request of ICE in 2012. Under the terms of this settlement, New Mexico taxpayers could be on the hook for nearly $750,000 — a price we can ill-afford given our state’s current budget woes.

Beyond the fundamenta­l unconstitu­tionality and costliness of these types of immigratio­n holds, detainers also threaten our communitie­s’ safety. When jails do ICE’s unconstitu­tional bidding and become proxy immigratio­n agents, it undermines trust in police. How willing would you be to go to the police to report a crime if you believed it could result in your family being torn apart? This reluctance within immigrant communitie­s to report crimes is already in evidence in places like Los Angeles, where the police chief found that since the beginning of 2017 Latino/a residents reported 25 percent fewer sexual assaults and 10 percent fewer incidences of domestic violence compared to the same period the previous year.

So if ICE detainers are unconstitu­tional and actually make us less safe, what’s really going on here? We see Sessions’ threats for what they are: part of the Trump administra­tion’s larger campaign of attacks on people of color, on immigrants, and on Muslims. By stoking fear and xenophobia, President Trump and AG Sessions are trying to distract and divide us so that we will lay blame on groups of people, rather than on failed policy, for unemployme­nt and crime. The vilificati­on of immigrants and minorities has been tried many times before in American history, and it always fails because ultimately people understand that our nation is strengthen­ed and enriched by hard-working new Americans.

So to put it in terms that Jeff Sessions, the former senator from Alabama, might understand: that dog just won’t hunt. By and large, New Mexico has resisted involving local law enforcemen­t with other people’s antiimmigr­ant agendas, and we shouldn’t let bullying and bluster from the Trump administra­tion change that. One might even hope that New Mexico’s example can help instruct Sessions on what respect for the law, Constituti­on, and basic human decency looks like.

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