Las Vegas Review-Journal

Rep. Kihuen, activists seek answers after Nevada ICE sweep

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

More than a week after 102 undocument­ed Nevadans were arrested in a sweep by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents, immigrants’ rights activists say they’re left with more questions than answers.

The agency announced the arrests on Sept. 28 in a brief news release, saying that 67 people were arrested in Clark County, 24 in Washoe County, seven in both Humboldt and Elko counties and two in Carson City.

Most of those arrested had prior criminal conviction­s, including “assault, battery, domestic violence, DUI, weapons charges and drug violations,” the release said. ICE did not provide a breakdown and declined to provide additional informatio­n to the Las Vegas Review-journal.

That leads some to question the severity of the crimes, said Michael Kagan, director of the UNLV Immi

ICE

gration Clinic.

“The (ICE) statement does not rule out the possibilit­y that a large minority of the targets had no record of all, while others may have only misdemeano­r records,” he said.

The statement also doesn’t rule out so-called “collateral arrests,” where ICE agents targeting an individual with a criminal record take other undocument­ed immigrants living in the same household into custody even though they haven’t committed a crime, Kagan said.

But others argue that a criminal record shouldn’t matter because being in the country without proper immigratio­n documents is itself an unlawful act. And while targeting such individual­s is a departure from previous administra­tion policy, it’s within ICE’S authority to do so, said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which advocates for low levels of immigratio­n.

“Under this administra­tion, they’ve gone back to the normal understand­ing of immigratio­n law that no category of people is exempt from enforcemen­t,” he said.

Rep. Ruben Kihuen, D-nev., wrote a letter to ICE officials last week seeking clarificat­ion on the targets of the operation in response to a surge of calls from concerned constituen­ts looking for help.

“There’s a lot of paranoia, even from people who are here with documents, here legally,” Kihuen told the Review-journal. “These are families that are being torn apart.”

In his letter to Robert Culley, the ICE field director officer in Salt Lake City whose jurisdicti­on includes Nevada, Kihuen listed a number of questions activists have been asking in the wake of the ICE release. The congressma­n said he plans to share the answers he receives from ICE.

Immigratio­n is an issue that hits close to home for Kihuen, who was born in Mexico and immigrated to the United States with his parents when he was 8. For a time, he was living in the U.S. on an expired visa. He is now a naturalize­d citizen.

Kihuen is a freshman in Nevada’s 4th congressio­nal district, which includes North Las Vegas, Mesquite and Pahrump. He is not seeking re-election following allegation­s of sexually inappropri­ate behavior with women. He has denied the allegation­s.

As he finishes out his term, Kihuen said he intends to keep pushing the issue and raising awareness and vowed to continue his activism after he leaves office. Overall, he said, the immigratio­n issue can’t be resolved unless Congress can come together and pass comprehens­ive reform legislatio­n.

He said he’d like to see a failed bill from 2013 — the Border Security, Economic Opportunit­y and Immigratio­n Modernizat­ion Act — resurrecte­d, but knows that’s unlikely given the current political climate toward immigratio­n.

“This is a dream bill, considerin­g Congress right now,” he said.

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

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