The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

We will enforce law, local ICE chief vows

Director seeks to dispel rumors about tactics.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

The man in charge of immigratio­n enforcemen­t for Georgia and the Carolinas has a message for immigrants living here without proper papers: Stay out of trouble, be careful about who you hang out with and get ready to return to your homeland.

“They know that at any point while they are in the country illegally that they could be subject to enforcemen­t,” said Sean Gallagher, the Atlanta field office director for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. “I would plan ahead because if you are encountere­d, you are going to be removed if the judge orders that.”

In an exclusive interview this month with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, Gallagher outlined his office’s enforcemen­t priorities amid the Trump era, sought to dispel rumors about ICE’s tactics and pushed back against several Atlanta-area cities that have moved to limit their

cooperatio­n with his agency following President Donald Trump’s election. Gallagher also confirmed that ICE is still investigat­ing the suicide of one of its detainees in South Georgia.

Based in downtown Atlanta, the former U.S. military police officer is overseeing a busy region for ICE at a time when the Trump administra­tion is ramping up immigratio­n enforcemen­t. Gallagher’s officers have participat­ed in several high-profile operations in the Atlanta region this year, apprehendi­ng dozens of people, including Iraqi and Somali nationals.

Soon after Trump moved into the White House his administra­tion issued guidelines significan­tly expanding ICE’s targets for deportatio­n. ICE’s focus was widened to include not only people with criminal conviction­s but those whose charges have not yet been resolved and others who “have committed acts which constitute a chargeable criminal offense.” People caught engaging in fraud or abusing public benefits programs could also face arrest and deportatio­n.

ICE has not finished tabulating its arrests in Georgia and the Carolinas for the fiscal year that ended last month. But an ICE spokesman said that — as of June 30 — his agency was on pace to carry out 12,525 for that year, which would amount to a 41 percent increase from the previous year. However, the Obama administra­tion — which was responsibl­e for record numbers of deportatio­ns — apprehende­d more people in the same three states in previous years.

Trump’s repeated promises to crack down on illegal immigratio­n have driven unauthoriz­ed immigrants further into the shadows and brought ICE’s tactics under more public scrutiny. Gallagher sought to knock down “rumors” that his officers are carrying out traffic checkpoint­s, and conducting indiscrimi­nate raids and racial profiling of people.

“When my officers go out in the field every day, they are looking for specific people,” said Gallagher, who has spent 27 years in federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t. “They have an operationa­l plan. And the arrest really is a culminatio­n of all their hard work, surveillan­ce, et cetera — the investigat­ive work they do. I think there are many in the public space that want to spread rumors about what ICE officers do. But they are profession­ally, highly trained officers that have a very specific mission.”

ICE, Gallagher added, is focusing on arresting people who pose threats to public safety and national security. At the same time, he confirmed that his officers are also apprehendi­ng other unauthoriz­ed immigrants they are encounteri­ng while they are searching for their targets. ICE calls such apprehensi­ons “collateral arrests.”

In 2011, the Obama administra­tion issued a policy aimed at shifting the government’s

focus toward expelling recent border crossers, serious criminals and those who threaten national security. Immigrants who were brought here as young children, who were attending school here or who had children who were U.S. citizens were to be given special considerat­ion under the “prosecutor­ial discretion” memo.

Gallagher said the Obama era’s enforcemen­t policies “fettered” his officers. Their morale has improved, he said, now that the Trump administra­tion is giving them more latitude.

“We were prevented from enforcing the law as it is written,” said Gallagher, who previously served as ICE’s Boston field office director. “Under this administra­tion, what they have asked us to do is enforce the law as it is written. And that is exactly what we are doing.”

Gallagher spoke to the newspaper a week after Trump outlined his requiremen­ts for any congressio­nal deal that would extend protection­s for young immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children without authorizat­ion. Last month, Trump announced the government would phase out the Obama administra­tion’s Deferred Actions for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, which grants renewable two-year work permits and temporary protection from deportatio­n. On Trump’s wish list are proposals to crack down on so-called “sanctuary cities,” expand cooperatio­n between local law enforcemen­t officials and ICE, and hire 10,000 more ICE officers.

Since Trump was elected, three Georgia cities — Atlanta, Clarkston and Decatur — have adopted measures in favor of restrictin­g their cooperatio­n with ICE. Decatur, for example, adopted a onepage policy prohibitin­g city police from arresting, detaining or transporti­ng anyone based solely on ICE detainers. That policy, city officials said, codifies an unwritten policy Decatur police had been following for more than 10 years.

At issue are ICE detainers, which are requests the agency sends to local authoritie­s. The detainers ask them to hold unauthoriz­ed immigrants for up to 48 hours beyond the time they would normally be released from jail so ICE can pick them up and seek to deport them.

Critics point to court ruling that say complying with ICE detainers can violate people’s Fourth Amendment protection­s against unreasonab­le

searches and seizures. Gallagher said it’s safer for his officers to pick up suspects at local jails.

“They lose some tactical advantage when they go out on the street because they are arresting criminals at their homes, at their places of employment or in the public space,” he said.

Gallagher also confirmed that the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g expanding a federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t program to additional counties in Georgia and the Carolinas, though he declined to identify them. Named after the law that authorizes it, the 287(g) program enables local law enforcemen­t officials to help enforce federal immigratio­n law. Four counties in Georgia — Cobb, Gwinnett, Hall and Whitfield — already participat­e.

“We hope to add another three or four before year’s end, possibly more” in Georgia and the Carolinas, he said. “There are certain jurisdicti­ons that are interested and we are exploring those right now.”

Further, ICE could use additional officers as Trump has proposed, particular­ly in South Georgia, Gallagher added.

“We would certainly like to have an office in the southern part of the state to assist us,” he said. “I would definitely welcome the resources.”

This month, the AJC reported private officers working at ICE’s Stewart Detention Center in South Georgia failed to check on a detainee they had deemed a “suicide risk” as often as they are required under ICE’s standards before he hanged himself in his solitary confinemen­t cell in May. One of those officers logged three visits to Jean Jimenez-Joseph’s cell that never happened, public records show. That officer’s “employment was terminated” on June 29, according to CoreCivic, the Nashville, Tenn.-based correction­s company that operates the detention center through agreements with ICE and Stewart County.

Gallagher declined to comment about the case, citing a continuing investigat­ion by ICE’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity. But he highlighte­d ICE’s standards for keeping its detention centers safe and secure.

“We require anybody who has an ICE contract to hold detainees to follow those very strict and rigorous standards,” he said. “We expect our contractor­s to offer an environmen­t that is appropriat­e and humane. And all of our contractor­s do.”

 ?? JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? (From left) Supervisor Damian Streetz, Deputy Field Office Director Joe Sifuentez and Assistant Field Office Director Bill McCafferty prepare for an arrest. “When my officers go out in the field every day, they are looking for specific people,” said...
JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM (From left) Supervisor Damian Streetz, Deputy Field Office Director Joe Sifuentez and Assistant Field Office Director Bill McCafferty prepare for an arrest. “When my officers go out in the field every day, they are looking for specific people,” said...
 ??  ?? Sean Gallagher is the head of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t’s Atlanta field office.
Sean Gallagher is the head of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t’s Atlanta field office.
 ?? JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? “I think there are many in the public space that want to spread rumors about what ICE officers do,” said Atlanta ICE Director Sean Gallagher.
JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM “I think there are many in the public space that want to spread rumors about what ICE officers do,” said Atlanta ICE Director Sean Gallagher.

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