The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ENFORCEMEN­T OF IMMIGRATIO­N MAY EXPAND IN GA.

2 counties look to team up with federal officers.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

Georgia’s Correction­s Department and authoritie­s in Bartow and Floyd counties have applied to team up with federal deportatio­n officers through an immigratio­n enforcemen­t program promoted by President Donald Trump, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has learned.

At issue is the federal 287(g) program — named after the section of the 1996 federal law that authorizes it — which deputizes state and local officials to help enforce federal immigratio­n laws. The program gives them the authority to investigat­e, apprehend, detain and transport people facing deportatio­n.

In an executive order he issued in January, Trump called for an expansion of the program. And in July, Immigratio­n Customs Enforcemen­t announced 18 new 287(g) agreements across Texas, bringing the nationwide total to 60. Four other counties in Georgia, Cobb, Gwinnett, Hall and Whitfield, already participat­e.

Supporters of the program say it is a “force multiplier” that helps expedite the deportatio­n of people with criminal conviction­s and deters others from coming to their communitie­s. Critics say it promotes racial profiling, erodes the trust immigrants have in police and distracts officers from more important crime-fighting duties. In 2012, the Obama administra­tion announced it was terminatin­g the “task force” part of the program in which police helped with street-level immigratio­n enforcemen­t in Georgia and other states.

A spokeswoma­n for the Georgia Department of Correction­s said ICE approached officials at her agency about the program, saying it would help “streamline their processes.”

“In April 2017, our agency met with ICE and discussed the specifics of the program and we were advised that if we were interested in implementi­ng the program, that we would need to submit a letter to participat­e,” Georgia Correction­s Department spokeswoma­n Gwendolyn Hogan said in an email. “On September 26th, our agency submitted a request to participat­e.”

Bartow Sheriff Clark Millsap confirmed his office has asked to join the program.

“We have been interested in the 287g program as another tool for use in law enforcemen­t,” he said in an email. “I see it as a way of being more proactive as the sheriff of Bartow County.”

Officials at the Floyd County Sheriff ’s Office had no immediate comment. The Rome News-Tribune reported that Floyd Sheriff Tim Burkhalter previously applied in 2007.

ICE spokesman Bryan Cox declined to comment, citing an agency policy concerning pending 287(g) applicatio­ns. Final decisions on applicatio­ns are made at ICE headquarte­rs in Washington, he said.

“Should any new 287(g) program be approved, the agency would publicly confirm at that time,” he said.

Azadeh Shahshahan­i, the legal and advocacy director for Project South, which advocates for immigrants, said she was disturbed by the possibilit­y that the program could be expanded. In Georgia, she said, it has resulted in “decreased safety and security because communitie­s of color and immigrants do not trust the police enough in 287(g) counties to report crimes.”

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