Austin American-Statesman

Bastrop traffic operation leads to deportatio­ns

Sheriff says stops had “nothing to do with targeting anybody.”

- By Sean Collins Walsh and Brandon Mulder scwalsh@statesman.com bmulder@acnnewspap­ers.com

At 7:23 p.m. Saturday, 27-year-old Jacqueline Benitez-Quintana was driving in western Bastrop County when she was pulled over by a sheriff ’s corporal for failing to use her blinker while changing lanes. When the officer, Brandon Stark, learned she was driving without a license, he arrested her.

Nine minutes later, Eugenio Orozco, 42, was pulled over in the same area by a sheriff’s deputy for having an obscured license plate. When the deputy asked Orozco for his driver’s license, Orozco instead handed over a Mexican ID card.

Driving without a license is a misdemeano­r that can land a motorist in jail. But the officer then learned that Orozco did in fact have a valid driver’s license. He arrested Orozco anyway for a different misdemeano­r: failure to display a license upon the

request of a peace officer.

They were among 24 people arrested Saturday night in a heavily Hispanic part of Bastrop County during a “zero tolerance” traffic enforcemen­t operation ordered by Bastrop County Sheriff Maurice Cook.

All but one of those arrested had Hispanic surnames. Thirteen, including Benitez-Quintana and Orozco, were picked up from the county jail by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t for deportatio­n proceeding­s.

At least seven had been deported by Tuesday, according to Mexico’s consul for Austin.

For Carlos González Gutiérrez, the Mexican consul, the operation was an alarming escalation in the coordinati­on between local and federal policing on immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“There was clearly a special operation on the border between Bastrop and Travis, and there was clearly a decision not to cite and release the offenders of these traffic violations in case the officer suspected that they were undocument­ed,” González said.

“We are very concerned that this takes to a new level the collaborat­ion between police and immigratio­n authoritie­s.”

For Cook, the operation was a routine law enforcemen­t tactic — although he said he has never conducted a traffic operation of this kind since taking office in January 2017.

“This is a fairly routine operation that we do from time to time, nothing to do with targeting anybody,” said Cook, a Republican and a former head of the Texas Rangers. “Not all of them were identified as illegal immigrants.”

The issue of local-federal coordinati­on on immigratio­n has become a lightning rod in Texas since the Legislatur­e last year approved a new law, Senate Bill 4, aimed at banning “sanctuary cities,” jurisdicti­ons that decline to assist federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Critics warned that it will lead to an increase in racial profiling by police and to more people getting arrested for “driving while brown.” Proponents said it will keep Texas safer by keeping dangerous criminals out.

Local government­s have reacted to the new law — and to the Trump administra­tion’s crackdown on illegal immigratio­n — in different ways. The Austin City Council this month declared the Texas capital a “freedom city” by passing a measure aimed at reducing arrests for minor offenses to prevent the deportatio­n of nonviolent, unauthoriz­ed immigrants. But Cook has emphasized that neighborin­g Bastrop County is not a sanctuary jurisdicti­on and fully cooperates with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

State Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, said the operation is an example what he and other Democrats feared would happen under Senate Bill 4.

“The limited facts available suggest a clear-cut case of racial profiling and organized immigratio­n enforcemen­t in cooperatio­n with federal authoritie­s,” Rodriguez, who is policy chair for the Mexican American Legislativ­e Caucus, said in a statement. “The (sheriff ’s office) may have caused long-term damage to its relationsh­ip with the community and seriously threatened public safety in a single evening.”

Life-changing traffic stops

Saturday’s operation centered on the FM 535 and FM 812 corridors in the Del Valle area of western Bastrop County, where 85 percent of schoolchil­dren are Hispanic, according to the Texas Education Agency.

Western Bastrop County also has seen a string violent crimes related to the drug trade in recent years.

Three deputies were assigned to work full-time on the operation Saturday night, and an additional two deputies participat­ed parttime by staking out that part of the county when they weren’t making arrests elsewhere. That five-officer team was in addition to the usual two deputies who patrol the area.

They pulled over 63 drivers for offenses such as speeding and changing lanes without signaling. They then asked drivers whether they had a Texas license, whether they were born in the U.S. and, in at least one case, about their immigratio­n status, according to González, whose office interviewe­d several of the Mexicans arrested before they were deported.

Cook said the operation was prompted by requests from civic leaders in the area who asked for a greater law enforcemen­t presence, but the sheriff said he could not remember the names of those leaders or their group.

After the American-Statesman first reported on the operation, members of Bastrop Interfaith said it was their group that met with Cook three weeks ago to discuss policing in the area and that they intended to send a different message: “the importance of building trust between the community and law enforcemen­t, including immigrant communitie­s.”

“We are outraged that after our conversati­on with Sheriff Cook about these matters, his department blatantly targeted immigrants and Hispanics,” the group said in a statement. “Sheriff Cook, by his actions has severely damaged the relationsh­ip between law enforcemen­t and the community.”

Of the 13 people who were arrested and then detained by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, three were driving while intoxicate­d, and the other 10 were taken in on charges related to driver’s licenses, including driving without a license, driving with an invalid license and Orozco’s arrest for refusing to display a license to an officer.

All were misdemeano­r offenses carrying relatively light punishment­s under state law. But the real consequenc­e for the unauthoriz­ed immigrants arrested was to be booked into the jail, where ICE can discover them through a background check network, place a detainer request with the sheriff and pick them up for deportatio­n proceeding­s.

Three of the 13 picked up by ICE had previous runins with the law in Texas, according to Department of Public Safety criminal background searches: One was previously arrested for leaving the scene of a collision, and two had been arrested for driving while intoxicate­d. One of the two with a previous drunken driving case also had been previously arrested for driving with an invalid license.

Cook said deputies could not have targeted unauthoriz­ed immigrants because they generally do not ask about the immigratio­n status of those they pull over. González, however, said that eight of the arrested immigrants his office interviewe­d disputed that account.

“One said clearly that he was asked about his immigratio­n status, and the others were asked about where they were born, they were asked about whether they have a Texas driver license or any kind of official U.S.-issued photo ID,” González said.

 ?? LYNDA M. GONZALEZ / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Twenty-four people were arrested Saturday night in a heavily Hispanic part of Bastrop County during a “zero tolerance” traffic enforcemen­t operation.
LYNDA M. GONZALEZ / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Twenty-four people were arrested Saturday night in a heavily Hispanic part of Bastrop County during a “zero tolerance” traffic enforcemen­t operation.
 ?? LYNDA M. GONZALEZ / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? At least seven people who were caught in a “zero tolerance” traffic operation on Saturday night had been deported by Tuesday, according to Mexico’s consul for Austin.
LYNDA M. GONZALEZ / AMERICAN-STATESMAN At least seven people who were caught in a “zero tolerance” traffic operation on Saturday night had been deported by Tuesday, according to Mexico’s consul for Austin.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States