The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sheriff to check for warrants at shelters

‘Secure shelter’ offered — at Polk County Jail.

- Christine Hauser

As Hurricane Irma barreled down on his state, a county sheriff in Florida said on Wednesday that law enforcemen­t authoritie­s would check the identities of people who turn up at shelters and take to jail anyone found to have an active arrest warrant.

“If you go to a shelter for Irma and you have a warrant, we’ll gladly escort you to the safe and secure shelter called the Polk County Jail,” Grady Judd, the sheriff in Polk County, announced in a series of messages on Twitter.

“We cannot and we will not have innocent children in a shelter with sexual offenders & predators,” the sheriff said, adding law enforcemen­t officers would be posted at shelters to check IDs.

“If you have a warrant, turn yourself in to the jail — it’s a secure shelter.”

The sheriff ’s office made the announceme­nts as residents of Florida on Wednesday stocked up or made preparatio­ns to evacuate ahead of Hurricane Irma, which on Wednesday battered the northeast Caribbean and was moving on to the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.

According to most of the latest projection­s, the Category 5 hurricane could make landfall in Florida by Sunday, although it was unclear where exactly that might happen. But the state is already bracing for impact. On Wednesday, Gov. Rick Scott activated the state National Guard and declared a state of emergency across the state.

Polk County, in Central Florida, has a population of more than 600,000 people. There are 47 public shelters in the county, but they have not yet been opened to accept hurricane evacuees.

The practices of law enforcemen­t officials and immigratio­n authoritie­s during life-threatenin­g storms have frequently come under scrutiny, as happened during Hurricane Harvey in Texas and in 2012 during Hurricane Isaac in Louisiana.

The Polk County sheriff ’s announceme­nt that authoritie­s would use the hurricane as an opportunit­y for arrests drew criticism online, leading some to question just how far the checks would go, such as whether Judd would jail those wanted on traffic or drug charges, The Orlando Sentinel reported.

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