Lodi News-Sentinel

San Diego area ICE arrests most noncrimina­l immigrants in U.S.

- By Kate Morrissey

SAN DIEGO — More people with no criminal history were arrested by San Diego’s Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t in the first quarter of fiscal 2018 than anywhere else in the country.

The San Diego field office for ICE, which covers San Diego and Imperial counties, was the only field office in the country where the majority of arrests — at about 72 percent — were of noncrimina­ls, according to data from the agency.

Between October and December, ICE officers here arrested 1,622 people without criminal records, and 637 people with criminal records.

The Atlanta field office, which covers three states — Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina — had the second highest number of noncrimina­l arrests at 1,592. That was about 41 percent of the arrests for that field office, where 2,343 people with criminal records were arrested by ICE.

“ICE arrests of noncrimina­ls in the San Diego/Imperial counties reflect trends involving illegal immigratio­n activity at the local borders, apprehensi­ons made during routine fugitive operations and individual­s encountere­d at the local jails,” said Lauren Mack, a spokeswoma­n for ICE.

For other field offices along the border, the highest percentage of noncrimina­l arrests was 43 percent in Phoenix, where ICE took 733 people with no criminal histories into custody.

Some attorneys speculated that ICE was pushing to make more arrests before SB 54, a California bill limiting local police cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n officials, took effect in January.

Other field offices in California did not reflect San Diego’s trend. In Los Angeles, ICE officers arrested 357 noncrimina­ls, which was about 16 percent of the field office’s arrests. In San Francisco, officers arrested 373, which was about 22 percent of the field office’s arrests.

Within days of taking office, President Donald Trump expanded the agency’s enforcemen­t priorities from those with serious criminal conviction­s to a broader list of people including those who had any criminal conviction, who had been charged but not convicted, who had done anything that could be charged as a crime, or who had already been ordered deported.

According to a recent Pew Research Center analysis, noncrimina­l arrests increased 49 percent in San Diego in fiscal 2017. The Atlanta and Philadelph­ia field offices tied for the largest increase at 323 percent.

As stories about families whose loved ones were targeted have been repeatedly spotlighte­d by media across the country and data from Trump’s first year in office showed an uptick in noncrimina­l arrests, ICE has insisted that it focuses on criminals but that anyone without authorizat­ion to be in the U.S. could end up arrested.

“While ICE continues to prioritize its enforcemen­t resources to focus on individual­s who pose a threat to national security, public safety and border security, the agency’s acting director has made it clear that ICE will not exempt classes or categories of removable aliens form potential enforcemen­t,” Mack told the San Diego Union-Tribune on multiple occasions. “All of those in violation of our nation’s immigratio­n laws may be subject to arrest, detention and, if found removable, he or she will be removed from the United States.”

Ginger Jacobs, an immigratio­n attorney in San Diego, said that in her time practicing, she’s noticed that the San Diego field office always works hard to follow orders from headquarte­rs.

“My perception as an attorney is that our local ICE office is very responsive to policy being set in Washington, D.C.,” Jacobs said.

Jacobs, who’s been practicing since George W. Bush’s administra­tion, said that during that time and into the first part of the Obama administra­tion, the main reasons that people would end up being arrested by immigratio­n officials were checkpoint­s and interactio­ns with local law enforcemen­t.

Collateral arrests happened, she said, but not frequently.

Beginning in 2011, she said, incrementa­l changes in policy under former President Barack Obama brought about more targeted enforcemen­t.

Those changes have reversed under Trump, she said, and arrests happen in circumstan­ces that would’ve been rare even under Bush.

“It turned into a zero-tolerance policy,” Jacobs said. “It’s like Bush on steroids.”

She has clients who have no criminal history and no prior deportatio­n orders who have been targeted at their homes, she said.

“Going to somebody’s house just because they have immigratio­n violations, I’ve never seen that before,” Jacobs said.

Edward Orendain, an immigratio­n attorney in Chula Vista, said he’s not surprised by the numbers from ICE’s San Diego field office. He noticed that beginning in September or October, any type of contact with law enforcemen­t could land an unauthoriz­ed immigrant in ICE detention even if there were no criminal charges.

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