Las Vegas Review-Journal

IMMIGRATIO­N

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mented immigrants according to the severity of their alleged crimes and criminal records. The reasoning behind the policy was that it allowed both police and immigratio­n officers to focus on deporting the most dangerous undocument­ed immigrants and engendered cooperatio­n with law enforcemen­t by law-abiding immigrants.

President Donald Trump in January changed those guidelines and reactivate­d the Secure Communitie­s program, which requires engagement with ICE on any inmates suspected of being undocument­ed immigrants — not just “the worst of the worst.” Metro has repeatedly used that phrase to describe its priorities since it joined an ICE program called 287(g) that deputizes its officers as immigratio­n agents in 2008.

Liesl Freedman, general counsel for Metro, declined to spell out whether the department continues to prioritize in terms of its communicat­ions with ICE, saying “the nuances between the different types of categories that ICE has … are complicate­d.”

But she said the Police Department, as a general matter, accepts ICE detainers “for persons who have prior conviction­s and ICE has probable cause to believe are in the country illegally.”

And Metro will notify ICE about an inmate’s custody status if the department receives a request, she said.

That may not be enough for ICE. NO DISTINCTIO­NS BETWEEN ‘CRIMINAL ALIENS’

“We have made our priorities clear,” ICE spokeswoma­n Sarah Rodriguez said Wednesday, adding that there are no distinctio­ns between categories of “criminal aliens.”

“These jurisdicti­ons who are setting their own priorities, that does not align with ICE,” she said.

She said the agency’s list was based on “jurisdicti­ons that have — in the past — publicly expressed unwillingn­ess to fully comply with ICE’s detainer requests (asking for a local jail to hold potentiall­y deportable inmates for up to 48 hours) or have not provided ICE with sufficient time to allow for the safe transfer of a detainee.”

“Should a jurisdicti­on make a posture change with regard to their policies involving detainers that is captured as a matter of public record and that ICE can point to, ICE will revise the report accordingl­y,” Rodriguez said in a statement.

Rodriguez said full compliance means honoring detainer requests, including holding an inmate for 48 hours beyond the normal “probable cause” detention period, and giving ICE advanced notice before an undocument­ed immigrant is released.

Neither Rodriguez nor a regional ICE spokeswoma­n would say explicitly whether Metro is currently in full compliance with agency policies.

Las Vegas police have been fighting the allegation that it’s a “sanctuary city” for about a year, at least.

In May 2016 — just weeks before Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo signed a new agreement with ICE — the county was listed in a memo by the U.S. Department of Justice’s inspector general as a jurisdicti­on that was receiving federal funds while not participat­ing with federal immigratio­n directives. ‘PRESS RELEASE AS EVIDENCE’

Lombardo fired back: In an August 2016 letter obtained by the Review-Journal through a public records request, the sheriff told the Justice Department that Metro has been participat­ing in the 287(g) program on a “24/7 basis” for nearly a decade.

And according to Lombardo’s letter, the department made 630 notificati­ons to ICE in 2015.

“I find it troubling that the Office of the Inspector General would arbitraril­y list Clark County in an assessment of so called sanctuary cities with no request from my agency for informatio­n, no visits to see first hand how we operate, and with nothing more than a press release as evidence,” the letter said, referring to a 2014 release stating that the department would no longer be holding inmates past their release date due to constituti­onal concerns raised by federal lawsuits at the time.

“I would request that Clark County Nevada be removed from this list … until a true assessment of our operations and cooperatio­n with ICE can be made,” Lombardo wrote at the end of the letter.

Freedman, the lawyer for Metro, said the department never received a response to its request for an assessment.

In the meantime, she said, the department is working on resolving its issues with the report issued by ICE on Monday. Contact Wesley Juhl at wjuhl@reviewjour­nal.com and 702-383-0391. Follow @WesJuhl on Twitter.

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