Baltimore Sun

City police OK with church-issued IDs

Immigrants will sign up for cards at Catholic parishes

- By Ian Duncan

The Catholic Archdioces­e of Baltimore will issue identity cards to undocument­ed immigrants and other vulnerable people that the Baltimore Police Department has agreed to recognize — a program activists hope will make people more willing to cooperate with law enforcemen­t.

Mayor Catherine Pugh and Archbishop William E. Lori joined church and community leaders Wednesday at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church in Canton, which is home to a large immigrant congregati­on and will run a pilot of the card system.

Pugh said that if the card gives even one person the confidence to report a crime, it will be a success.

“No one should become a victim and be afraid to call the police,” Pugh said.

The program is the city’s latest effort to aid immigrants, whom city leaders see having a significan­t role boosting the health of some neighborho­ods. The Rev. Bruce Lewandowsk­i, pastor of Sacred Heart of Jesus, holds up a parish ID card like one that will be issued to parisioner­s of several Catholic churches.

The Police Department plays only a minimal role in enforcing immigratio­n laws — which are a federal matter — and in March the city approved $200,000 in funding for lawyers to represent people facing deportatio­n.

Advocates for immigrant communitie­s say people without legal status in the United States are reluctant to come forward as victims or witnesses of crime. They say helping immigrants get an identity card from a trusted institutio­n — the Catholic Church — will make people more comfortabl­e talking to officers.

Pugh committed to the program at a town hall meeting in June.

Lori said the program has the backing of the archdioces­e and its designers hope that vulnerable immigrants will be more willing to come forward and deal with the church, rather than the government, to get an identity document.

“Together, we are standing here. We are sending a clear message,” Lori said. “People have a right to be safe. People have a right to live in a city where we see each other as neighbors and friends, rather than strangers and enemies.”

To qualify for a card, an applicant will need to have been a member of a parish for three months, present other identity documents and have a witness testify to their identity. The cards will be linked to parish membership records, but there will not be a specific database of cardholder­s, which could guard against any future attempt by federal immigratio­n officials to track cardholder­s.

Each card will bear the holder’s picture, the Sacred Heart parish logo and contact informatio­n for the church.

Maryland issues drivers’ licenses to undocument­ed immigrants, but requires applicants to have evidence they filed state taxes for two years or proof of residency. Advocates say immigrants often find the process difficult to successful­ly navigate.

Rachel Brooks, an organizer with the BUILD church coalition that helped design the program, said she expects several hundred people to sign up for the cards right away and that thousands of people might ultimately be interested.

“The value of it is being able to have something that is saying publicly you’re part of Baltimore City,” Brooks said. “People are hesitant to interact with police at all. It is one more step forward that gives people the feeling of security to be active members of our society.”

The Rev. Bruce Lewandowsk­i, the priest at Sacred Heart, said in an interview that immigrants are often preyed upon by criminals who know they’re less likely to report an incident.

“A lot of our undocument­ed immigrant people, parishione­rs, do not call the police when they are victims of crime because they are afraid that the police are cooperatin­g with [Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t],” he said.

It wasn’t clear how broadly the cards would be accepted. A news release issued by BUILD said city agencies would recognize the cards.

Catalina Rodriguez Lima, the head of the mayor’s immigrant relations office, said she wanted to emphasize that most city services don’t require people to present identity Archbishop William E. Lori talks about the parish identifica­tion cards during a conference with the mayor, the interim police commission­er and BUILD leaders. documents at all. But Brooks challenged that assertion, saying that when organizers attended meetings at City Hall to discuss the card program, they had to show identifica­tion to get into the building.

The police already accept a range of forms of identity, but the department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for a complete list.

At the announceme­nt, interim Police Commission­er Gary Tuggle said the credibilit­y of BUILD and the Catholic Church was a “validator for the police.”

Tuggle said commanders would be introduced Thursday to the cards and training of officers would begin in two weeks. People without identity documents can currently report crimes, but, Tuggle said, being able to identify victims would help police deliver justice.

Around the country, undocument­ed im- migrants have a patchwork of ways to get an identity document.

As in Maryland, about a dozen states allow them to obtain drivers’ licenses, some cities issue ID cards and private groups have also launched programs elsewhere. Consulates of foreign government­s also sometimes issue ID cards to their citizens in the U.S.

The Catholic Church in Dallas started a similar program this spring to the one being rolled out in Baltimore.

“This is something that is working in other cities,” Pugh said.

However, North Carolina banned local government­s from using such cards in 2015 after some law enforcemen­t officials questioned whether they could be used to credibly identify someone.

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KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN
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KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN

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