Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Police: Prison officer threatened family

- By Frank Eltman

A correction­s officer who threatened his family has been arrested and was suspended, officials said.

Some teenagers who entered the United States under the unaccompan­ied-children program are being illegally detained because of allegation­s of gang affiliatio­n, the American Civil Liberties Union says in a lawsuit.

The lawsuit was filed in San Francisco on behalf of three teenagers recently detained on Long Island. An ACLU lawyer says the lawsuit was filed there because the teenagers were taken to a government facility in northern California.

The lawsuit is seeking class action status to determine the national scope of the detention program and the number of teenagers who may be affected.

William S. Freeman, senior staff attorney for the ACLU of Northern California, said the suit charges the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt with accepting unsubstant­iated gang allegation­s made by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. The suit said the children were placed in severely restrictiv­e conditions based on the allegation­s.

Freeman said the children had previously been screened by the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt and placed with their parents on Long Island after entering the country illegally from Central America.

“They have dreams and legal claims to remain in the United States, but they’ve been swept up by an administra­tion that prioritize­s deportatio­ns over truth and justice,” he said.

The defendants in the lawsuit include President Donald Trump’s attorney general, Jeff Sessions; Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt. Officials from the various federal agencies did not immediatel­y respond to email requests seeking comment Friday.

Last month, the New York Civil Liberties Union claimed at least nine teenagers from Long Island have been sent to U.S. immigratio­n detention facilities after being falsely labeled as gang members. Freeman said he did not know whether the three plaintiffs his organizati­on represents are among those nine.

Police on Long Island have been sweeping up dozens of people suspected of being MS-13 gang members in the past year following the deaths of 17 people in possible gang violence in Suffolk County. Trump, a Republican, visited the area last month, vowing a crackdown on the gangs.

“They kidnap. They extort. They rape, and they rob . ... They shouldn’t be here,” Trump told a gathering of law enforcemen­t officers in Brentwood, the community at the epicenter of the violence.

Some attorneys have claimed their clients have been unfairly caught up in the police crackdown and labeled as gang members or affiliates and then subjected to immigratio­n detention.

Suffolk County police Commission­er Timothy Sini told The New York Times there were times when officers couldn’t make criminal arrests so officers work with federal immigratio­n officials to target known gang members “for violation of civil immigratio­n laws, which is another way to remove dangerous individual­s from our streets.”

Children who enter the U.S. illegally unaccompan­ied by their parents are treated differentl­y under U.S. law. They aren’t immediatel­y deported if caught at the border, like adults, and can be placed with relatives in the U.S. while they undergo a lengthy vetting process.

Long Island is among the leading destinatio­ns nationally for the children because of its large Hispanic population. More than 4,000 have been placed there in the past three years.

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