San Francisco Chronicle

Council cancels pact with immigratio­n unit

- By Kimberly Veklerov Kimberly Veklerov is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: kveklerov@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @kveklerov

The Oakland Police Department can no longer designate its investigat­ors as U.S. customs enforcemen­t officers — a classifica­tion that allows local police agencies to work with federal immigratio­n officials on cases of human traffickin­g, narcotics smuggling and other crossborde­r crimes.

Citing concerns over data sharing and heightened fear of deportatio­ns, the Oakland City Council on Tuesday unanimousl­y rescinded an agreement with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t signed last summer by former Police Chief Sean Whent, hours before he resigned amid questions over his handling of a sexual misconduct scandal.

But whether the memorandum of understand­ing with the criminal investigat­ions arm of ICE was ever actually put to use in Oakland — and the consequenc­es of revoking it — remains in dispute, even within the Police Department.

A report issued by Chief Anne Kirkpatric­k in May showed that the only recent involvemen­t her department had with an ICE operation was in October, when two officers were asked to provide cover while federal agents served a search warrant. But last week, Deputy Chief Danielle Outlaw told a city public safety committee that active investigat­ions into sex and labor traffickin­g would be jeopardize­d by rescinding the agreement with Homeland Security Investigat­ions.

The work with Homeland Security “allows us to have that federal arm and to have that transnatio­nal piece that we just as a local municipal agency do not have access to,” Outlaw said as she advocated for keeping the arrangemen­t.

A police spokesman said Outlaw wasn’t available to answer questions Tuesday, and other interview requests made to police and city officials were not returned.

Oakland’s Privacy Advisory Commission, which pushed for the agreement to be rescinded on the basis that police data could be shared with federal agencies, asked the Police Department for a list of officers who participat­ed in the ICE program and was told no one had actually done it yet, according to Brian Hofer, who chairs the commission.

San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Mateo counties have similar versions of the agreement, which lets local law enforcemen­t investigat­ors be “deputized” as Homeland Security Investigat­ions “task force officers.” The arrangemen­t is limited to solving crimes and doesn’t cover cases of immigratio­n law.

“Even though it might not be immigratio­n-enforcemen­trelated, it’s still this guilt-by associatio­n chilling effect we’re seeing,” Hofer said, referencin­g comments from the Los Angeles police chief, who said in March that reports of sexual assault and domestic violence by Latino residents had sharply decreased amid fears of deportatio­n. “We see this as a public safety threat. It’s causing confusion and trauma in the community.”

The two halves of ICE — immigratio­n enforcemen­t and criminal investigat­ions — can sometimes cross paths, as they did in Santa Cruz earlier this year, when federal agents working with county sheriff ’s deputies conducted a sting against suspected members of the notorious MS-13 gang. Swept up in the arrests were people whose only offense was being in the country without legal permission.

Also Tuesday, the Oakland City Council unanimousl­y passed an ordinance that increases oversight and public engagement in surveillan cerelated agreements between the city and federal agencies.

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