Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Metro’s ICE decision raises questions.

Sheriff says he was just trying to avoid suit

- By Debra J. Saunders

WASHINGTON — When the Metropolit­an Police Department announced last month that it “will no longer honor federal immigratio­n detainers for civil immigratio­n violations,” the press release cited a Sept. 27 federal court decision in Central California as the reason.

Detainers allow local law enforcemen­t to keep undocument­ed immigrants in custody for up to 48 hours to give ICE time to pick them up for deportatio­n.

The press release did not mention that no other jurisdicti­on in Nevada had changed its policy because of the court’s holding in Gonzalez v. ICE, which Metro noted was likely to be appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “Until the uncertaint­y in the law is clarified,” the press release reported, “(Metro) must cease honoring ICE detainers.”

Asked if any other jurisdicti­on had changed its detainer policy because of the Gonzalez ruling, a Metro spokesman said, “The city of Las Vegas made a similar announceme­nt, otherwise we are not aware.”

A spokeswoma­n for ICE knew of no other jurisdicti­on that had changed its ICE detainer policy because of the Gonzalez ruling.

ACLU of Nevada spokesman Wesley Juhl told the Review-Journal he could think of no other jurisdicti­on that had changed its policies because of the ruling by U.S. District Court Judge André Birotte Jr. of the

Central District of California. “I think we’re ahead of the pack in that regard,” Juhl responded.

The Central District of California comprises San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

Sanctuary or not?

While the ACLU of Nevada lauded Metro for “ending its practice of honoring unconstitu­tional ICE detainers,” and not participat­ing “in

the federal government’s deportatio­n agenda,” Sheriff Joseph Lombardo assured the public that the department would continue to work with ICE to “remove persons without legal status who have committed violent crimes.”

That announceme­nt, however, leaves unanswered questions and again raises the issue of whether Las Vegas is a so-called sanctuary city that declines to cooperate with federal law enforcemen­t.

In 2016 the Department of Justice inspector general put out a list of “sanctuary” jurisdicti­ons that didn’t cooperate with ICE detainers. The report cited a 2014 Metro announceme­nt that the agency effectivel­y would not honor ICE detainers because of an Oregon federal magistrate’s ruling.

In 2017, when ICE reported that Las Vegas was “non-cooperativ­e” with federal immigratio­n officials, Metro protested that the agency had participat­ed in the 287(g) program for years and said it had transferre­d 99 inmates into ICE’s custody that year alone.

The 287(g) program allows local law enforcemen­t agencies to perform federal law-enforcemen­t tasks on immigratio­n, under a memorandum of understand­ing with the Department of Homeland Security.

As Metro had moved toward enforcemen­t, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions said he would look into the sanctuary city designatio­n.

In February, the Review-Journal reported that Lombardo had directed correction­al officers to stop placing holds on undocument­ed immigrants with low-level traffic bench warrants. Lombardo had released the statement to the Review-Journal as anti-ICE protesters were rallying outside Metro’s headquarte­rs.

In June, Lombardo signed a memorandum of understand­ing extending the department’s participat­ion in the 287(g) program until June 30, 2020.

When Metro announced on Oct.23 that Metro had suspended the 287(g) program, Lombardo said, “While the (Gonzalez v. ICE) ruling can be seen as a setback, I am determined that through cooperatio­n with our federal partners the goal of removing the worst of the worst can still be accomplish­ed.”

Questions remain

Clark County Commission­er Tick Segerblom, who joined anti-ICE protesters in February, told the Review-Journal it is not clear to him “if it is change in policy or they’re just changing how they describe it.”

Segerblom said Lombardo, a Republican, was chummy with ICE during Trump’s first two years in office when Nevada had a Republican governor and senior U.S. senator, Brian Sandoval and Dean Heller, respective­ly. Sandoval completed his second and final term in January, and Heller was defeated for re-election in November 2018.

“Then we got a new Democratic Governor (Steve Sisolak), we got another Democratic senator (Jacky Rosen),” Segerblom said in reference to the mid-term election. “I think the sheriff sees the writing on the wall and figured I want to get along with these people.”

But Lombardo said politics wasn’t the reason. He said he was trying to avoid litigation with the ACLU when he made his decision.

“Maybe other jurisdicti­ons can afford to fight a lawsuit ; I can’t,” he told the Review-Journal.

At the same time, the sheriff said he had issues with 287(g). He was concerned with individual­s arrested for local charges, not immigratio­n offenders. And when he tried to stop ICE from removing individual­s for minor charges, it did not always work.

“I think the public elected me to make decisions,” the sheriff said. “I think the key to this is the word ‘suspended.’ I advised ICE that I’m suspending cooperatin­g with the 287(g) program. I intend to cooperate with ICE,” while he awaits court rulings.

Rural counties still in

Lyon and Nye counties still participat­e in the program.

While the ACLU of Nevada also leaned on those rural counties to get out of 287(g), Lyon County Sheriff Frank Honeywell told the Review-Journal that he sees the program as a reliable tool for rural agencies, and it doesn’t help when large agencies like Las Vegas distance themselves from it.

Lyon County doesn’t use the program the way a big city would use it. “The only time we’re using it is, somebody gets arrested on local charges. And they come into a facility and we don’t have any way to identify them.”

Honeywell estimates Lyon County uses the program for up to four people in a year. Trained staff use the federal immigratio­n database to identify individual­s who remain in custody on local charges. “Nobody in our custody is solely placed here on an ICE detainer,” Honeywell stipulated.

The 287(g) program is an optional arm of Secure Communitie­s, a program launched in 2008 that authorizes federal officials to check the fingerprin­ts taken from local law enforcemen­t with Department of Homeland Security databases to identify in-custody undocument­ed immigrants with prior criminal records.

Program began under Obama

President Barack Obama embraced Secure Communitie­s when he first took office. Then-Assistant Secretary of Immigratio­ns and Customs Enforcemen­t John Morton maintained that the program would “prevent removable criminals from returning to the streets, saving states and localities valuable resources and keeping communitie­s safer.”

But as advocates for undocument­ed immigrants began to pan Obama as the “deporter in chief,” he pulled back on how and when the program could be used. In 2014, Obama terminated the program. But during his first month in office, President Donald Trump signed an order to reinstate Secure Communitie­s.

By that time, the Gonzalez case had been in the system for years. In 2012, ICE issued an immigratio­n detainer to the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department before Gerardo Gonzalez was released from custody.

That should not have happened because Gonzalez, who was born in Pacoima, California, is a natural-born U.S. citizen, and was never subject to removal.

Relying on ICE documentat­ion, the ACLU argued that ICE databases can be unreliable. Between May 2015 and February 2016, 771 of 12,797 detainers issued were lifted because the cited individual­s were not subject to removal — 42 were U.S. citizens.

Fourth Amendment concerns

Thus, the ACLU argued, the 287(g) program violates the Fourth Amendment protection against “unreasonab­le searches and seizures.” Judge Birotte agreed and issued a permanent injunction to stop detainers based solely on unreliable database searches. The potential for misidentif­ication, he wrote, means that “many U.S. citizens become exposed to possible false arrest when ICE relies solely on deficient databases.”

The ACLU also argued successful­ly that it is unconstitu­tional for ICE to issue detainers through state or local law enforcemen­t agencies in states that have not passed an explicit law authorizin­g the use of ICE civil detainers to hold individual­s.

Birotte’s injunction also prevents the Pacific Enforcemen­t Response Center in Laguna Niguel from issuing detainers based on database-only checks to 43 states that use the service.

Impeding the feds

Randy Capps, research director of the Migration Policy Institute, observed that the Metro announceme­nt leaves it to the department’s

discretion to share informatio­n with ICE. “Nothing in this court case precludes ICE from conducting interviews with people in custody,” Capps explained, and it would be in keeping with Las Vegas’ focus on cooperatin­g with ICE to remove the worst offenders.

The Pacific Enforcemen­t Response Center has responded to the order by sending informatio­n to ICE field offices, which can issue detainers by using a workaround that responds to the judge’s concerns, according to Paige D. Hughes, ICE western regional communicat­ions director.

“It does impede us,” Hughes told the Review-Journal. Jails are “the safest place to apprehend an individual,” she added, because it means ICE agents don’t have to show up at suspects’ home or work. ICE estimates that three-quarters of

the arrests it made this year came from ICE working with jails and prisons.

In 2018, according to ICE records, ICE arrested 105,140 undocument­ed immigrants who had been convicted of violent crimes, including 1,641 homicides, 4,975 sexual offenses, 3,740 sexual assaults and 54,360 DUIs.

Another 32,977 had criminal charges pending.

“Here’s the problem,” Segerblom offered, “If you’re arrested for what’s arguably a violent felony, if you’re arrested for domestic battery, it doesn’t mean you’re guilty.” For Segerblom, “conviction is really critical.”

Shutting down operations

“This judge is taking some relatively rare cases and using that as a tool to attempt to shut down a large part of ICE’s operation,” observed Jessica Vaughan of the pro-enforcemen­t Center for Immigratio­n Studies. That’s true even though detainers “are directed at people who have come to ICE’s attention because they have been convicted or charged with crimes,” she said.

“Most sheriffs I know would tell the ACLU to pound sand,” Vaughan added.

Segerblom said Las Vegas never went so far as to tell ICE to stay away.

Will ICE designate Las Vegas a sanctuary city?

“I would say not,” Hughes responded. ICE is working to find ways to work with Metro, she said.

 ?? Michael Quine Las Vegas Review-Journal @Vegas88s ?? In February, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported that Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo had directed correction­al officers to stop placing holds on undocument­ed immigrants with low-level traffic bench warrants.
Michael Quine Las Vegas Review-Journal @Vegas88s In February, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported that Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo had directed correction­al officers to stop placing holds on undocument­ed immigrants with low-level traffic bench warrants.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States