Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fingerprin­ting app assists in deportatio­ns

- Frank Bajak GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O

BOSTON – A mobile fingerprinti­ng app U.S. immigratio­n agents use to run remote ID checks in the field has become a core tool in President Donald Trump’s deportatio­n crackdown, a pair of immigratio­n rights groups say in a new report based on a Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit.

The 2,500 pages of documents obtained through the 2017 lawsuit show that the app, known as EDDIE, has helped Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents ramp up deportatio­ns of migrants not intentiona­lly targeted for removal, the report states. Such people are often detained as “collateral­s” picked up in operations aimed at others, the activists say in Monday’s report. They say that field use of the app exacerbate­s racial profiling in immigrant communitie­s.

For instance, an internal agency newsletter released with the documents described immigratio­n agents using the app during traffic stops in collaborat­ion with local police in Escondido, California, in 2017. That report credited the operation with “333 illegal alien arrests” in a 12-month period, although it provided scant additional context.

Used routinely by U.S. immigratio­n and border agents, mobile fingerprinti­ng figures in a biometric data collection scheme the Trump administra­tion is seeking to broadly expand in its final weeks. A regulation proposed by the Department of Homeland Security on Sept. 11 would formalize the collection of face, iris and palm prints of non-citizens, as well as their DNA, in addition to the fingerprint data now collected.

“EDDIE is a way to bypass oversight and accountabi­lity,” said Paromita Shah of the nonprofit Just Futures Law, which produced the report with the immigrant rights group Mijente. “It allows agents to do the booking, to do the interrogat­ions out of sight, out of the public’s view,” she said.

ICE spokesman Mike Alvarez rejected those allegation­s. He said field use of the app, paired with Bluetooth-enabled fingerprint readers, does not replace detention booking at a local office. “There is no way to know” whether its use increases

The app EDDIE allows agents to check fingerprints collected in the field against those registered in DHS and FBI databases.

collateral arrests, he said, because ICE doesn’t collect such data.

The app allows field agents to check the fingerprints they collect remotely against those registered in DHS and FBI databases. Courts have questioned federal databases’ reliabilit­y when used as the sole basis for detention decisions.

Under extraordin­ary pandemic-related powers beginning in March, Border Patrol agents have used mobile fingerprinti­ng devices to assist in immediate expulsions to Mexico without giving migrants a chance to seek asylum.

The FOIA lawsuit was brought by the National Immigratio­n Project of the National Lawyers Guild and Mijente, who say the collection and sharing of biometric data by DHS leaves non-citizens vulnerable to both civil rights and data privacy abuses. The EDDIE app accesses a person’s immigratio­n history, any outstandin­g arrest warrants and previous encounters with U.S. law or immigratio­n officers. It collects location data and time stamps and has been used in all U.S. immigratio­n field offices as well as abroad, the documents show.

Becca O’Neill, a Charlotte, N.C., immigratio­n lawyer, said ICE agents routinely use the app when pulling over vehicles linked to deportatio­n orders, trying to fingerprint everyone inside. Agents do the same at targeted homes, she said. O’Neill tells migrants they have a constituti­onal right not to submit to mobile fingerprinti­ng. Alvarez said it is voluntary, but activists say immigratio­n agents’ behavior often contradict­s that claim.

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