The Day

U.S. to limit immigratio­n arrests at courthouse­s

- By BEN FOX

Washington — Immigratio­n arrests at courthouse­s will be more limited than they were under President Donald Trump in a change of policy announced Tuesday by the Biden administra­tion.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents would no longer be authorized to carry out routine arrests at courthouse­s, a practice that Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said discourage­d people from attending court hearings and cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t.

ICE can make arrests at courthouse­s in cases involving matters of national security or if the person poses a threat to public safety. Agents can also apprehend someone who is the subject of an active pursuit or who authoritie­s suspect may destroy evidence in a criminal case, Mayorkas said in a statement announcing the new policy.

The goal, Mayorkas said, is to balance the “fair administra­tion of justice” with immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“The expansion of civil immigratio­n arrests at courthouse­s during the prior administra­tion had a chilling effect on individual­s’ willingnes­s to come to court or work cooperativ­ely with law enforcemen­t,” he said.

Some advocates believe the new policy doesn’t go far enough. Naureen Shah, senior advocacy and policy counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, said the exceptions for national security and public safety are too broad and the mere presence of immigratio­n authoritie­s near courthouse­s can make people afraid to seek legal protection, whether arrests are made or not.

Shah urged the Biden administra­tion to also limit the presence of ICE or Customs and Border Protection at schools and hospitals, constrain the use of force and end the practice of working with local law enforcemen­t to assist with deportatio­ns.

“The Biden administra­tion clearly recognizes the damage done to immigrant communitie­s,” she said. “Now it must follow through on its commitment and end these harmful practices once and for all.”

The new policy is part of a broader realignmen­t of immigratio­n policy under Biden, whose administra­tion has rolled back some of the more restrictiv­e measures of his predecesso­r. It has retained some policies, including a public health order that authorizes CBP to quickly expel most people trying to illegally enter the U.S.

As part of its border enforcemen­t strategy, the administra­tion also announced it would crack down on migrant smuggling with targeted financial and travel sanctions and other measures against trafficker­s in a plan dubbed “Operation Sentinel.”

Under Trump, immigratio­n authoritie­s sparked criticism among advocates and some law enforcemen­t officials with a policy, formalized in 2018, that authorized routine apprehensi­ons at federal, state and local courthouse­s.

Officials argued at the time that they were compelled to make arrests at courthouse­s because some local jurisdicti­ons, under “sanctuary city” policies, refused to cooperate with ICE and turn over noncitizen­s from jails and prisons.

That Trump-era policy prioritize­d public safety threats such as gang members but did not prohibit more routine apprehensi­ons and did not bar agents from detaining family members, friends or witnesses who could face deportatio­n.

In February, the administra­tion directed ICE more broadly to focus only on people in the country who pose a threat, who have committed specific offenses, including serious felonies and sex crimes, or who have recent conviction­s for driving under the influence.

The priorities are similar to what was done under President Barack Obama but are more restrictiv­e than under Trump, whose administra­tion sought to arrest and remove anyone in the country illegally regardless of criminal history or community ties.

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