Los Angeles Times

Ruses by immigratio­n agents come under fire

Posing as local police raises legal and ethical questions

- By Joel Rubin

During a nationwide operation this month by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, a team of ICE agents in Los Angeles approached the house of a man targeted for deportatio­n.

“Good morning, police,” one agent announced in the predawn darkness.

A man opened the door moments later.

“Good morning. How you doing? I’m a police officer. We’re doing an investigat­ion,” the agent said.

The exchange, captured on a video released publicly by ICE, seemed routine. But it has reignited long-simmering objections from immigrant rights attorneys and advocates, who say the scene illustrate­s unethical — and, in some cases, illegal — ruses ICE agents have used for years, portraying themselves as officers from local police department­s to ensnare people or fool them into revealing the whereabout­s of family members.

The use of the tactic, critics said, is particular­ly egregious in heavily immigrant cities such as Los Angeles and San Francisco, where police and elected officials have tried for decades to distinguis­h their cops from federal immigratio­n agents in an effort to convince immigrants living illegally in their cities that they can interact with local police without fear of deportatio­n. The practice of using ruses predates the Trump administra­tion. But the president’s announceme­nt of his intent to dramatical­ly raise the number of people ICE apprehends for deportatio­n has increased concerns by immigrant advocates that the tactic will grow even more prevalent.

“There is something fundamenta­lly unfair about ICE exploiting local and state policies that are

trying to improve public safety by promoting immigrants’ trust in law enforcemen­t,” said Frances Miriam Kreimer, senior attorney at Dolores Street Community Services in San Francisco.

Kreimer is challengin­g the legality of a ruse ICE officers used to arrest a client, in which they told the man they were police officers investigat­ing a crime.

Internally, ruses are allowed and encouraged by ICE officials, who describe them in training manuals and policy notices as an effective tool at agents’ disposal for dictating when and how an arrest is made.

Virginia Kice, an ICE spokeswoma­n, declined to address questions about the use of ruses, saying the agency does not comment on tactics out of concern for agents’ safety and the effectiven­ess of its operations. The tactics agents use, she said in a statement, “are consistent with their authoritie­s under federal law and in accordance with the Constituti­on.”

Ruses and other types of deceit are used at all levels of law enforcemen­t. Courts have long upheld the right of police, to a point, to mislead suspects during investigat­ions and interrogat­ions.

But the legal questions surroundin­g the use of ruses by immigratio­n agents are more complicate­d.

There is nothing illegal about ICE agents simply identifyin­g themselves as police officers while standing outside someone’s front door. However, agents generally are not armed with search or arrest warrants when they try to detain someone on suspicion of being in the country illegally. Without a warrant, they cannot force their way into someone’s home and instead must receive consent from an adult to enter.

In a few cases in which ICE agents used deception to gain entry and then arrested someone, lawyers have successful­ly argued the ruses ran afoul of constituti­onal protection­s.

In one such case, ICE agents in Texas went to the door of an apartment early one morning in December 2008 and identified themselves as police, in search of a man they suspected of having reentered the country illegally after being deported. The man’s mother answered their knocks. Fearing that she wouldn’t let them in if they showed her a photo of her son, the agents showed her a photo of another man, according to court records.

After the woman told them the man was not inside, the agents pressed her to allow them in to check. The woman and the agents gave differing accounts in court of whether she consented, but once inside the agents found neither the man in the photo nor the woman’s son. The agents, however, awoke another man, his wife and infant child and inquired about their immigratio­n status and arrested the man on suspicion of being in the country illegally.

The judge in the case found that even if the woman did agree to allow the agents inside, as they claimed, they had misled her so thoroughly it rendered her consent meaningles­s and violated the Constituti­on’s protection­s against warrantles­s searches and seizures. The judge did not allow any statements or other evidence the agents gathered in the house to be used against the man in his trial.

In the Los Angeles raid this month, the video released by ICE doesn’t show how agents went from announcing themselves as police to entering the house or whether someone was taken into custody as a result.

The Immigrant Defense Project, the Center for Constituti­onal Rights and other advocacy groups have documented dozens of arrests in recent years in which witnesses or people arrested say ICE agents used deceit while targeting people for deportatio­n.

In one case, ICE agents in Los Angeles identified themselves as police detectives to the mother of Luis Enrique Cruz Estrada, saying her son had informatio­n regarding the whereabout­s of a person they wanted to find, according to attorney Jennie Pasquarell­a, director of immigrants’ rights for the American Civil Liberties Union of California.

For weeks, the agents called Estrada on his cellphone, allegedly urging him to meet them in order to discuss their investigat­ion. Estrada, who had a conviction in juvenile court for possession of a firearm when he was 15 and now has two small children, ultimately agreed to meet and was arrested, Pasquarell­a said. He is being held at an immigratio­n detention facility in Adelanto.

ICE officials addressed the question of ruses a decade ago after agents pretending to be officials from the government’s Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion staged a meeting for immigrant workers in North Carolina and arrested people who attended.

After OSHA officials protested, ICE leaders issued a series of policy changes that allowed ruses to continue but required agents to get the permission from any government body or private group before impersonat­ing them in a ruse.

In a memo implementi­ng the change, the acting ICE director at the time wrote that permission was needed “to ensure the agency or entity’s name who we wish to use as cover has an opportunit­y to raise concerns about how our use of their name will affect their public image or raise security concerns for their employees.”

That concern is particular­ly acute in cities and towns where police and elected officials have taken steps not to cooperate with efforts by ICE agents to identify and apprehend immigrants simply because they are in the country illegally.

In Los Angeles, where a recent Pew study estimated the population of people in the country illegally at 375,000, Police Chief Charlie Beck and Mayor Eric Garcetti have gone to significan­t lengths to advocate for the rights of immigrants and distance the LAPD’s work from the immigratio­n enforcemen­t agency’s.

Beck, for example, has tightened rules on when his officers can impound vehicles, arguing that immigrants unable to get driver’s licenses were unfairly burdened. And, under Beck, the LAPD does not honor requests from ICE agents to hold someone in custody who would otherwise be released.

“When you create a shadow population ... that fears any interactio­n” with law enforcemen­t, Beck said in a recent interview with The Times, “then you create a whole population of victims, because they become prey for human predators who extort them or abuse them because they know they won’t contact the police.”

Beck and Garcetti have renewed their stance since the election of President Trump, who made cracking down on illegal immigratio­n a centerpiec­e of his campaign. Acting on an executive order Trump signed soon after taking office, administra­tion officials this week dramatical­ly expanded the federal government’s deportatio­n priorities, saying immigratio­n enforcemen­t officers are free to target any of the 11 million people in the U.S. illegally for removal.

LAPD Assistant Chief Michel Moore declined to comment on the use of ruses by ICE. He said LAPD officers go out of their way to clearly identify their department whenever interviewi­ng or interrogat­ing someone.

This week, Pasquarell­a said the ACLU will formally ask Beck, Garcetti and the City Council to take steps to ensure that ICE agents do not identify themselves as LAPD officers.

 ?? Michael Johnson Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t ?? AN IMAGE from a video of an ICE operation in Los Angeles last week. Critics say ruses used by the agency are especially troubling in L.A. and other cities where local police have worked to win the trust of immigrants.
Michael Johnson Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t AN IMAGE from a video of an ICE operation in Los Angeles last week. Critics say ruses used by the agency are especially troubling in L.A. and other cities where local police have worked to win the trust of immigrants.
 ?? Michael Johnson Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t ?? IMMIGRATIO­N AND CUSTOMS Enforcemen­t agents in Los Angeles last week. The agency said the tactics agents use “are consistent with their authoritie­s under federal law and in accordance with the Constituti­on.”
Michael Johnson Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t IMMIGRATIO­N AND CUSTOMS Enforcemen­t agents in Los Angeles last week. The agency said the tactics agents use “are consistent with their authoritie­s under federal law and in accordance with the Constituti­on.”

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