Los Angeles Times

Kenyan held by ICE for 9 years

Asylee’s criminal past may explain long detention, but data show patterns vary.

- By Andrea Castillo

In 2003, Kenyan immigrant Sylvester Owino was convicted of second-degree robbery in San Diego.

He finished a more than two-year prison sentence and was transferre­d to the Otay Mesa Detention Center as Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t began removal proceeding­s against him.

Owino applied for asylum but almost 10 years went by before he was released from immigratio­n detention in 2015.

The long years in detention for Owino might seem the simple byproduct of his criminal record — were it not for cases like those of two Rwandan men being held 2,500 miles away in Virginia.

The men have been at the Farmville Detention Center since February 2007 — longer than any other immigrants in the U.S. But no crimes blot their history in the U.S.

Two dozen other detainees in California alone have spent more than three years in ICE custody, according to data obtained through a public records request by the Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use of Syracuse University and released last month. Most of them, like Owino, have already served time for criminal conviction­s.

The longest detained immigrant in the state is a Mexican man whose most serious criminal conviction is for drug possession. The man has been at the Imperial Regional Detention Facility in Calexico, Calif., since December 2012.

According to TRAC data, ICE classified the conviction as a Level 3, which is the agency’s lowest seriousnes­s level and includes misdemeano­r offenses and other minor violations. An ICE spokeswoma­n said she could not provide other spe-

cifics about any case without a date of birth or “alien number,” which is used to track detainees.

The TRAC report provides a snapshot of ICE detainees around the country through June. It also shows that, when it comes to how long an immigrant can spend in detention, it doesn’t always make a difference whether the person has a criminal history.

Nationally and in California, the majority of the more than 44,000 detained immigrants have no criminal conviction­s, according to TRAC data. Among those with criminal histories, the most common conviction­s include illegal entry, DUI and assault.

“It’s not about what’s best for families, or even what’s best for this country,” said Christina Fialho, coexecutiv­e director of Freedom for Immigrants, which advocates for ending immigrant detention. “That’s indicative of the system as a whole; there really isn’t a pattern to any aspect of immigratio­n detention.”

ICE spokeswoma­n Lori Haley said no category of immigrants is exempt from enforcemen­t. She said ICE also analyzed its detainee population in June and found that 54% of detainees had a criminal conviction — or pending charges, and that 70% were subject to mandatory detention.

“These figures reflect appropriat­e allocation of limited resources,” she said.

People who are subject to mandatory detention are not entitled to a bond hearing and must stay in detention while they are in removal proceeding­s.

Haley said federal law mandates the detention of people who arrive at ports of entry, are subject to expedited removal and are convicted of certain crimes. Immigrant rights groups say ICE has the discretion to release anyone.

The majority of detainees had been in ICE custody only for a few months when the numbers were released to TRAC.

But the varying detention cases illustrate the complicate­d nature of immigratio­n law — a patchwork of legislatio­n put together over the years and modified by administra­tions, policymake­rs and case law, said Judge Ashley Tabaddor, who leads the National Assn. of Immigratio­n Judges.

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, also has “a lot of leeway and discretion, particular­ly at the outset, in terms of determinin­g someone’s detention status,” she said.

Private companies run most of the nation’s detention facilities. It costs the federal government $134 a day on average to maintain one adult detention bed, according to ICE’s fiscal year 2018 budget. The National Immigratio­n Forum calculates a higher cost of $208 a day. Each family residentia­l center bed, which keeps mothers or fathers with their children, costs about $319 a day, according to the ICE budget.

People from Mexico and India make up about half of the nearly 5,800 detainees in California, with smaller numbers coming from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, the data show.

The vast majority of detainees from India have no criminal conviction­s, and only one Indian person out of more than 1,100 detained in California is labeled an asylum seeker. But The Times reported recently that a growing number of California detainees are Indians crossing through Mexico to seek asylum.

Similarly, just 48 people detained in California were labeled as legal residents.

Fialho, of Freedom for Immigrants, said those numbers seem too low.

David Bier, an immigratio­n policy analyst at the Libertaria­n Cato Institute, said ICE should focus on detaining people who are likely to pose a risk to U.S. citizens, taking into account the social cost of different crimes, the likelihood that a person could re-offend and flight risk compared with the cost of detaining them.

“All of those resources that are going into detaining those people who haven’t committed any kind of serious offense are resources that are going away from tracking down people who are a threat,” he said.

In September, news outlets reported that then-Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions planned to review a court case that, if overruled, would cause most asylum seekers to remain in detention indefinite­ly while their claims are processed. Currently, asylum seekers who enter the U.S. illegally are allowed a bond hearing before an immigratio­n judge.

This year, the Supreme Court determined in Jennings vs. Rodriguez that immigrants are not entitled to periodic bond hearings and sent the case back to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals for further litigation. At issue in another case the high court heard last month, Nielsen vs. Preap, is whether immigrants convicted of certain crimes should be exempt from mandatory detention after they are released from custody if ICE doesn’t detain them immediatel­y.

Fialho said half of the more than 7,000 people her organizati­on worked with the first three months of this year had spent two to four years in detention. She said the Trump administra­tion’s hard-line stance on immigratio­n enforcemen­t means ICE agents no longer have incentive to use their discretion to release people from detention.

Many people remain in detention because they can’t afford to pay a bond, Fialho said. Judges have the discretion to set the amount — at minimum $1,500, though the median amount nationwide is $7,500, according to another TRAC report. Others remain in detention because they aren’t eligible for release.

Immigrants who are ordered deported have the right to appeal. For people who are subject to mandatory detention, that can mean years of waiting inside a facility.

That’s exactly what happened to Owino, who fled Kenya in 1998, arriving in the U.S. on a student visa after he said he’d been jailed, beaten and threatened by the government.

It took two rounds of appeals to the Board of Immigratio­n Appeals and then the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals before he was granted bond, with the help of Fialho’s organizati­on, in 2015. He spent nine years in immigratio­n detention. His asylum petition remains ongoing.

Part of what kept Owino in detention for so long was something that binds many immigrants whether they were arrested for a crime: determinat­ion not to be deported. Owino said there were days he considered accepting deportatio­n, as others had, just to get out.

Owino’s next court date is in January. Meanwhile, he’s glad to be with his wife and infant daughter on his time off from running a Kenyan food truck in San Diego.

He said it’s difficult to fight a deportatio­n case from detention. He didn’t have a lawyer half the time because, unlike in criminal proceeding­s, immigrants are not entitled to court-appointed attorneys. But he considers himself an example of what could happen if more detained immigrants were granted bond.

“We can leave our mistakes behind and push forward,” he said. “Nobody should be detained that long.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times ?? SYLVESTER OWINO with his daughter. The Kenyan migrant served jail time for robbery in San Diego, then nine years in detention before his release in 2015.
Photograph­s by Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times SYLVESTER OWINO with his daughter. The Kenyan migrant served jail time for robbery in San Diego, then nine years in detention before his release in 2015.
 ??  ?? OWINO’S INFANT Akeyo Itzel Owino grabs the attention of Owino, his wife, Velia Maria Villanueva, second from left, and Miraya Gisel Mandujano.
OWINO’S INFANT Akeyo Itzel Owino grabs the attention of Owino, his wife, Velia Maria Villanueva, second from left, and Miraya Gisel Mandujano.

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