Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

ICE puts on ice reports to shame ‘sanctuary cities’

- By Joseph Tanfani Washington Bureau Department of Homeland Security spokesman

WASHINGTON — Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t is suspending a recently adopted practice of reporting cities that don’t cooperate with federal detention efforts after the first few reports were plagued by errors.

The new policy, an attempt to pressure cities and counties that refuse to hold people in the country illegally for immigratio­n agents, was a priority for President Donald Trump. Last month, Attorney General Jeff Sessions promised to push back against these “sanctuary cities,” possibly by denying them federal funds and using other methods of pressure.

The weekly “declined detainer” reports by ICE were supposed to be a first step, focusing attention on jurisdicti­ons that were releasing immigrants from jail or after arrest.

But in some cases, ICE mixed up names, confusing Franklin counties in Iowa, New York and Pennsylvan­ia, said David Lapan, chief spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security. In other cases, the detainees had already been picked up by ICE, or had never been released in the first place.

The reports were suspended after two weeks.

“We want to make sure we look at this holistical­ly and make sure we are getting this as accurate as possible,” Lapan told reporters on Tuesday.

The department still intends to “let the public know which jurisdicti­ons have policies that do not assist ICE in its mission,” he said, adding that he didn’t know when the reports would resume.

One immigratio­n rights advocate said the pullback points out the flaws in the new get-tough policy. “One of the fundamenta­l problems with what the attorney general and President Trump are trying to do is to mobilize a massive deportatio­n task force” by shaming and pressuring states and cities, said Gregory Chen, director of advocacy for the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n.

Another point of contention: Just what does it mean to be a “sanctuary city?” Some cities that won’t honor detainers still work with ICE, by letting the agency know when someone is about to be released. One of them is Franklin County in south central Pennsylvan­ia, which landed on the “uncooperat­ive” list after ICE said the county jail was not honoring requests to hold five prisoners.

“We looked at the informatio­n we had and it didn’t match up with the informatio­n in the report,” said David Keller, chairman of the county commission. “They said, yeah, the informatio­n is not correct, and we apologize.”

David Lapan,

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