Imperial Valley Press

Iowa court: State cannot prosecute immigrant using fake ID

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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A woman whose parents brought her to Iowa from Mexico 20 years ago at age 11 cannot be prosecuted by the state for identity theft and forgery, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled Friday.

The 4-3 divided court, in a significan­t ruling that could have broad consequenc­es for those living in Iowa illegally and using fake credential­s to obtain work, concluded prosecutio­n of crimes such as identity theft and forgery when related to immigratio­n fall under federal jurisdicti­on and cannot be prosecuted in state court.

“Local enforcemen­t of laws regulating employment of unauthoriz­ed aliens would result in a patchwork of inconsiste­nt enforcemen­t that would undermine the harmonious whole of national immigratio­n law,” Justice Brent Appel wrote for the majority.

Martha Martinez, who is now 31, obtained an Iowa driver’s license when she was 17 using a birth certificat­e and Social Security card borrowed from a woman named Diana Castaneda.

She also used the fake credential­s to obtain federal authorizat­ion to get a job in Muscatine at a company that provides sanitation services for food processing plants.

Martinez in 2013 received temporary lawful immigratio­n status under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy implemente­d under President Barack Obama. She was able to obtain a driver’s license under her real name and newly issued Social Security number provided through DACA.

However, the Iowa Department of Transporta­tion, using facial recognitio­n software, matched her face with the driver’s license she obtained at 17 using Castaneda’s credential­s. After an investigat­ion, Muscatine County Attorney Alan Ostergren charged her with the two felonies that upon conviction could get her deported.

The majority of the court said the federal government routinely chooses not to prosecute immigrants in similar situations as Martinez on humanitari­an grounds, noting she was educated in Iowa, has no criminal record, is a productive member of the community and is the mother of four children born in Iowa.

“Federal enforcemen­t officials might well weigh the fact that a mother would be separated from her four children who are United States citizens as a very undesirabl­e result,” the court said.

The justices also said federal authoritie­s might blanch at prosecutin­g a person who in good faith came out of the shadows under protection of the DACA program.

The Obama policy offered a reprieve from deportatio­n to people in the country illegally who could prove they arrived before they were 16, had been in the U.S. for several years and had not committed a crime since arriving.

It gave so-called Dreamers an opportunit­y to stop hiding and live and work without fear of deportatio­n.

It’s unclear, however, whether President Donald Trump plans to continue the same protection­s.

Ostergren said he firmly believes identity theft cases should be investigat­ed and prosecuted.

He said the ruling means Iowa law enforcemen­t will be powerless to prosecute some cases of identity theft.

“Quite frankly it puts Iowa as an outlier in the country so the question is if you are illegally here and you are stealing someone’s identity then there’s one state in the country you can move to and not be prosecuted right now,” he said.

Martinez’s attorney, Philip Mears, called the decision a tremendous victory for immigrants.

“The Iowa Supreme Court has recognized the important protection provided to Dreamers given their connection and tremendous contributi­ons to the country they grew up in and call home,” he said.

Justice Edward Mansfield and two other justices believe Martinez should be prosecuted. In his dissenting opinion Mansfield said the decision gives a pass from prosecutio­n for immigrants living in Iowa illegally and using fake credential­s, which could also be used to avoid paying taxes or to cover up a criminal history.

An American citizen without the protection­s offered immigrants, however, could be prosecuted for the same crimes.

“Our job should not be to pick winners or losers but to apply federal law as given to us by Congress and state law as given to us by the general assembly,” he said.

The Iowa attorney general’s office has 90 days to decide whether to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Iowa court decision.

A spokesman said they are reviewing it and considerin­g all options.

 ??  ?? In this May 11, 2015, file photo, nuclear waste is stored in undergroun­d containers at the Idaho National Laboratory near Idaho Falls, Idaho. Federal officials are requesting a 20-year extension involving the storage at an Idaho facility of reactor...
In this May 11, 2015, file photo, nuclear waste is stored in undergroun­d containers at the Idaho National Laboratory near Idaho Falls, Idaho. Federal officials are requesting a 20-year extension involving the storage at an Idaho facility of reactor...

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