Los Angeles Times

San Gabriel withdraws from its ICE partnershi­p

Cities grow wary of agreements with federal investigat­ors

- By Frank Shyong

For the better part of a decade, an agency that bilked Chinese immigrant investors out of nearly $50 million operated in plain sight from a storefront in the front lobby of the bustling Hilton San Gabriel hotel.

Their crimes came to light last year after a task force of San Gabriel police and federal immigratio­n officials tracked transactio­ns between Chinese and U.S. banks, conducted cross-border surveillan­ce operations, launched an undercover sting and sought informatio­n from the Chinese government.

San Gabriel Valley police department­s often use federal partnershi­ps to tackle crimes like these — many of which target vulnerable new immigrants — because they lack the necessary resources, skills and technology to pursue them.

But the largely immigrant communitie­s that they police are starting to protest these partnershi­ps in the wake of aggressive, Trump-era immigratio­n enforcemen­t that has stoked widespread fears over deportatio­ns.

On Tuesday, San Gabriel city leaders rescinded a Police Department agreement with immigratio­n officials, citing doubts about the arrangemen­t’s necessity and heightened fears about deportatio­ns.

The memorandum of understand­ing, signed by

Police Chief Eugene Harris in December, designates a San Gabriel police detective to act as a customs officer on a task force that investigat­es various types of immigratio­n-related crimes.

Although the memo states that the designated officer does not have the authority to enforce administra­tive violations of immigratio­n law, city leaders said the decision should have been brought before the City Council.

The partnershi­p sends the wrong message about the city’s stance toward immigrants, Councilman Jason Pu said. The city’s population is 61% Asian and 25% Latino, and more than half of of all residents are foreignbor­n. He also asked the City Council to consider a “sanctuary city” resolution at a later meeting.

“The city of San Gabriel embraces our immigrant communitie­s. If the message becomes ‘Come to San Gabriel and get deported,’ it would be devastatin­g to our community and to our businesses,” Pu said.

Harris said the partnershi­p with Homeland Security Investigat­ions was designed to fight crimes, not deport immigrants. Contributi­ng an officer to an HSI task force allowed the department to access federal databases, among other resources.

Councilman John Harrington voted against canceling the agreement and accused other council members of playing politics.

“This sends the message that politics are more important than residents’ safety,” Harrington said.

The news of the agreement was met with alarm in San Gabriel.

Advocacy groups and residents chanted slogans and waved signs before the Tuesday night meeting, which was so crowded that the city was forced to relocate it from City Hall to the nearby San Gabriel Mission Playhouse.

San Gabriel’s agreement was one of dozens that Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials have struck with local agencies across Southern California, including jurisdicti­ons as small as Monterey Park and as large as the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

The documents lay out terms for informatio­n-sharing, compensati­on for labor costs and, in some cases, the designatio­n of a local police officer to work on a task force with Homeland Security Investigat­ions, ICE’s criminal investigat­ions arm.

But California’s new “sanctuary state” law largely prohibits the use of local funds and personnel on both criminal and civil immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Jurisdicti­ons around the state are scrutinizi­ng these agreements and other local collaborat­ions with ICE — and in some cases canceling them.

Pasadena city leaders recently voided an agreement signed by Police Chief Phillip L. Sanchez, saying that it required the signature of the city manager.

Santa Monica also canceled its Police Department’s arrangemen­t with ICE in a letter from the city manager last year, citing concerns about “implied or inadverten­t involvemen­t in civil immigratio­n enforcemen­t by the SMPD.”

Oakland city leaders canceled their agreement with ICE after activists learned that two Oakland police officers had stopped traffic during a raid that resulted in the arrests of two people. One was placed in deportatio­n proceeding­s. Federal officials said the operation was targeting a human traffickin­g ring, but no criminal charges have been filed.

In Santa Cruz, a criminal investigat­ion targeting gang members also brought about the arrests of several non-gang members for immigratio­n violations. The city police chief, Kevin Vogel, said he was never informed about the possibilit­y of collateral arrests.

“They misled my department as to the actual scope of the operation. I feel like I was lied to,” Vogel said.

ICE officials said they told Vogel that collateral arrests of non-gang members could occur during the operations several days before the raids, which Vogel disputes.

Though Santa Cruz had no agreement with ICE, Vogel warned other police department­s to clarify the terms of their cooperatio­n with ICE up front.

“I’m not in a position to tell authoritie­s which laws to enforce,” said Vogel, a 30year veteran of the Santa Cruz Police Department who retired in June. “But you have to be straight with me if you’re going to come into my city for an operation.”

A detective in San Gabriel has been assigned to an HSI task force since June. The group has arrested two people it says were posing as immigratio­n attorneys in order to charge exorbitant fees for fraudulent legal services. It has also investigat­ed a counterfei­t driver’s license and passport operation, and is looking for the owners of 30 Chinese passports discovered in a package.

These cases are typically too small to draw the attention of state and federal law enforcemen­t agencies but too complicate­d for local police department­s to handle with their own resources, Harris said.

Police department­s and immigratio­n authoritie­s say these partnershi­ps are strictly for criminal investigat­ions.

But advocates say it may be impossible to ensure these partnershi­ps won’t include what the Trump administra­tion has called “collateral arrests,” or arrests of immigrants who are in the country illegally but are not the target of criminal investigat­ions.

“Even if the original intent is to investigat­e a crime, if they find neighbors, bystanders that they believe are removable, they will also arrest and detain them,” said Angela Chan of Advancing Justice — Asian Law Caucus, a coauthor of Senate Bill 54, the sanctuary state bill.

Of the 111,000 immigratio­n arrests reported by ICE between Jan. 20 and Sept. 30 of last year, about 8% were collateral arrests. And last year, ICE’s acting director, Thomas Homan, warned that more collateral arrests might be one result of California’s passing a sanctuary state bill.

Agreements like San Gabriel’s, immigrant rights advocates say, often are broadly worded and rarely include any mention of collateral arrests or consequenc­es for violating the agreement, said Ana Muñiz, assistant professor of criminolog­y at UC Irvine.

“On one hand, ICE and HSI can technicall­y comply with agreements, but on the other hand, there are rhetorical and technical loopholes,” Muñiz said.

Police officers working with HSI task forces are “not authorized” to arrest people for administra­tive violations of immigratio­n law, said Jennifer Reyes, assistant special agent in charge for Homeland Security Investigat­ions Los Angeles. But immigratio­n officers working on HSI task forces have no such restrictio­ns.

“HSI special agents, however, have the authority to make administra­tive arrests during criminal investigat­ions as part of enforcing our nation’s laws,” Reyes said.

Harris said he thinks proper oversight of joint operations with immigratio­n authoritie­s could ensure that no local resources are used to enforce immigratio­n law.

Federal, state and local agencies work together to emphasize that public safety is a shared goal across all law enforcemen­t agencies, Harris said.

But cities are increasing­ly wary of the perception of endorsing the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies. And some city leaders, like Pu, don’t see ICE and HSI as trustworth­y law enforcemen­t partners.

“The bottom line is, you just can’t trust ICE during the Trump administra­tion,” Pu said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? ACTIVISTS protest Tuesday after a revelation that the San Gabriel Police Department had entered a memorandum of understand­ing with U.S. Homeland Security Investigat­ions for immigratio­n-related crimes.
Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ACTIVISTS protest Tuesday after a revelation that the San Gabriel Police Department had entered a memorandum of understand­ing with U.S. Homeland Security Investigat­ions for immigratio­n-related crimes.
 ??  ?? ADVOCATES worried a police partnershi­p with federal authoritie­s put immigrants at risk of removal.
ADVOCATES worried a police partnershi­p with federal authoritie­s put immigrants at risk of removal.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? ACTIVISTS protest San Gabriel’s agreement with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, one of dozens struck with local agencies across Southern California.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ACTIVISTS protest San Gabriel’s agreement with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, one of dozens struck with local agencies across Southern California.

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