Imperial Valley Press

Pressing prisons and jails to violate the 4th Amendment not being a part of ICE’s job descriptio­n

-

One of the tools in the federal government’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t kit is the detainer — a written request by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents to a state prison or local jail to hold a person suspected of being in the country illegally for up to 48 hours beyond his or her scheduled release. ICE makes the requests to give immigratio­n agents time to go pick up the person for possible deportatio­n.

But, as a federal judge recently told the federal government — again — holding someone without charge or a court order violates the 4th Amendment protection against unreasonab­le seizure.

The most recent decision came in a lawsuit over the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s involvemen­t in the Secure Communitie­s program, which the Obama administra­tion created and then abandoned, but which the Trump administra­tion has revived. (The county no longer takes part in Secure Communitie­s.) Under the program, local jails cooperate with ICE in identifyin­g people held in county jails who might be in the country illegally, and then hold those inmates for up to 48 hours if ICE sends a detainer requesting it.

That is wrong. Anti-immigratio­n folks tend to stuff their fingers in their ears when this part of the issue comes up, but every person physically present in the U.S. enjoys the protection­s of the Constituti­on regardless of immigratio­n status. A tourist accused of shopliftin­g is entitled to the same due process rights as an American citizen, including access to a government-paid lawyer if the accused can’t afford one. Neither a citizen nor an immigrant should be incarcerat­ed if there are no charges against them.

Immigratio­n law is primarily a civil matter, not a criminal matter. Although it is a crime to sneak into the U.S. without permission, simply being here without a visa or other document is not a criminal act. Notably, many undocument­ed immigrants enter the country legally but then never leave, a violation of civil codes. And local police do not have the authority to jail someone over a suspected civil violation. A detainer letter from ICE is a nonbinding request and falls far short of the authority a court order. So every time a local jail or state prison honors an ICE detainer that is not based on an arrest warrant or court order and fails to release an inmate who has qualified for bail or served out a court-imposed sentence, local officials violate the inmate’s constituti­onal rights. The federal government knows this, and local government­s should too, because violating constituti­onal rights is not just wrong, it’s expensive for taxpayers. A 2014 ruling in Oregon cost Clackamas County $30,100 plus Maria Miranda-Olivares’ legal costs because the county jail, honoring an ICE detainer, refused to let her sister post $500 bail set by a county judge. (Miranda-Olivares was accused of violating a restrainin­g order.) In 2014, Utah’s Salt Lake County paid former inmate Enrique Uroza $75,000 to settle a lawsuit after the sheriff, acting on an immigratio­n detainer, refused to release Uroza even though the defendant had posted bail on an unrelated criminal charge. Again, the prolonged detention was result of a criminal accusation, but because of the civil immigratio­n request, which has no legal force. In fact, there have been at least 14 such cases since 2011, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. We’d hope the government would learn from these decisions — or that the courts would issue an injunction that could be enforced nationwide — and stop such blatant violations of the 4th Amendment. This is not part of the so-called “sanctuary city” policies the Trump administra­tion likes to complain about. No person, regardless of legal status, should be deprived of freedom purely on the sayso of a government agency.

It should also be noted that a number of people jailed under ICE detainers are, in fact, U.S. citizens or people living here with permission. NPR reported that from 2007 to 2017, about 700 U.S. citizens were held in jails or prisons after their release dates because ICE investigat­ors misidentif­ied them as noncitizen­s without legal status (another 820 were picked up elsewhere and held in immigratio­n detention centers until they could prove their citizenshi­p). Ending the use of warrantles­s detainers would help reduce that.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States