The Palm Beach Post

Trump seeks local police aid in immigratio­n crackdown

- Associated Press

PHOENIX — To b u i l d h i s h i g h l y t o u t e d d e p o r t a - tion force, President Dona l d Tr u mp i s r e v i v i n g a long-standing program that deputizes local officers to enforce federal immigratio­n law.

The pro g ra m re c e ive d scant attention during a week in which Trump announced plans to build a border wall, hire thousands more federal agents and impose restrictio­ns on refugees from Middle Eastern countries.

But the program could e n d u p h av i n g a s i g n i f i - c ant impact on immigratio­n enforcemen­t around the country, despite falling out of favor in recent years amid complaints that it promotes racial profiling.

More than 60 police and sheriff ’s agencies had the special authority as of 2009, applying for it as the nation’s immigratio­n debate was heating up. Since then, the effort has been scaled back.

Sheriff Joe Arpaio used the program most aggressive­ly in metro Phoenix, and he became arguably the nation’s best-known immigratio­n enforcer at the local level. In a strange t wist, he was voted out of office in the same election that made Trump president, mostly because of mounting frustratio­n over legal issues and costs stemming from the patrols.

I n hi s exe c ut ive ord e r last week, Trump said he wants to empower local law enforcemen­t to act as immigratio­n officers and help with the “investigat­ion, apprehensi­on, or detention” of immigrants in the country illegally.

The move comes at a time when the country is sharply divided over the treatment of immigrants. Proponents say police department­s can help bolster immigratio­n enforcemen­t and prevent criminals from being released back into their neighborho­ods, while critics argue that deputizing local officers will lead to racial profiling and erode community trust in police.

Cecillia Wang, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney, said police bosses who want to get into immigratio­n enforcemen­t should consider what happened when 100 of Arpaio’s deputies were given the federal arrest power.

The longtime sheriff used the authority to carry out traffic patrols that targeted immigrants. The patrols were later discredite­d in a lawsuit in which a federal judge concluded Arpaio’s officers had racially profiled Latinos. The lawsuit has so far cost county taxpayers $50 million.

“There are people like Joe Arpaio who have a certain political agenda who want to jump on the Trump bandwagon,” Wang said, adding later that the Arizona sheriff was “most vocal and shameless offender” in the program.

Traditiona­lly, police stayed out of immigratio­n enforcemen­t and left those duties to federal authoritie­s. But a 1996 federal law opened up the possibilit­y for local agencies to participat­e in immigratio­n enforcemen­t on the streets and do citizenshi­p checks of people in local jails. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t trained and certified roughly 1,600 officers to carry out these checks from 2006 to 2015.

The Obama administra­tion phased out all the arrest power agreements in 2013.

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