Los Angeles Times

It’s time to rethink detention

- he United

TStates has the dubious honor of maintainin­g the world’s largest immigratio­n detention system. Other countries may house more refugees, but we lock up the most people whose right to stay in the country is in dispute. Tens of thousands of people a day are held until they’re deported or granted permission to stay by an immigratio­n judge (or at least released on bond or into a sponsor’s custody pending a further hearing).

It is a shameful aspect of U.S. immigratio­n enforcemen­t that the government denies liberty to so many people who have neither been accused nor convicted of a crime. To be sure, every nation has a right to control its borders and determine who gets to come in. We don’t believe that the U.S. should maintain open borders, but the government’s reliance on detention as a tool for dealing with people accused of arriving or staying here illegally is needlessly expensive, grossly inhumane and unjust to people exercising their legal right to seek asylum.

While the current administra­tion has embraced and expanded the practice, this is not a creation of President Trump. Such detentions date to the 1882 Immigratio­n Act, and current detention policies are rooted in the 1952 Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Act. More recently, Cuban and Haitian migrants arriving by boat in the 1970s and ’80s were placed in detention centers, in part to deter their countrymen from similarly setting off to sea on rickety boats. Congress eventually mandated detention for migrants convicted of certain crimes that made them ineligible for admission.

The Illegal Immigratio­n Reform and Immigrant Responsibi­lity Act of 1996 greatly expanded the immigratio­n detention system through contracts with local jails and state and privately run prisons. In fact, most of the 39,000 people incarcerat­ed on any given day in the U.S. for immigratio­n reasons — more than 350,000 pass through the system each year — are held in prison-like conditions in more than 200 locations nationwide.

Some local government­s have expanded their jails so they can house, for a daily fee, migrants that Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t wants detained. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e has granted $360 million in low-interest loans since 1996 to help rural communitie­s build jails often larger than they need, so local officials can use detainees and the fees they bring to cover operating expenses, according to a recent report by the nonprofit Vera Institute of Justice.

ICE spends nearly $3 billion a year on immigratio­n detention, about two-thirds of which goes to private prison corporatio­ns and local jails. That’s an exorbitant amount of tax dollars to spend denying freedom of movement of people who, in the vast majority of cases, pose no threat to us.

And notably, at least 77% of migrants facing deportatio­n proceeding­s show up for their hearings, according to reports. Rates are highest among those who find legal help or receive support from community groups, which suggests there are better methods for handling this than detention.

There may, of course, be valid reasons for detaining some migrants, such as newly arrived asylum-seekers whose identities have yet to be verified, people facing imminent court-ordered deportatio­n who the government has reason to fear might disappear, or violent felons who pose a realistic threat to public safety.

One of the largest contributo­rs to noshows is the government’s failure to keep current contact informatio­n for migrants during proceeding­s that can stretch out for years. One approach would be to match migrants to community service groups or sponsors to better keep track of the individual­s and ensure they appear for court hearings; sadly, Trump killed an experiment­al Obama program that did just that.

This administra­tion has chosen instead to double down on detention, and now it reportedly is considerin­g reviving a version of the vile family separation­s. If family separation and detention worked as a deterrent, the president wouldn’t be tweeting so furiously these days about the current caravan of Central American migrants moving northward through Mexico. Detention-asdeterren­ce is not only an inhumane approach, it’s a failed one.

The government can neither detain nor deport its way out of this problem. It must find a better way. The fact that it has failed to do so for so long, regardless of which party controlled Congress or the White House, is an embarrassm­ent.

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