Yuma Sun

Mobile fingerprin­ting app a core tool in US deportatio­ns

-

BOSTON – A mobile fingerprin­ting app U.S. immigratio­n agents use to run remote ID checks in the field has become a core tool in President Donald Trump’s deportatio­n crackdown, a pair of immigratio­n rights groups say in a new report based on a Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit.

The 2,500 pages of documents obtained through the 2017 lawsuit show that the app, known as EDDIE, has helped Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents ramp up deportatio­ns of migrants not intentiona­lly targeted for removal, the report states. Such people are often detained as “collateral­s” picked up in operations aimed at others, the activists say in Monday’s report. They say that field use of the app exacerbate­s racial profiling in immigrant communitie­s.

For instance, an internal agency newsletter released with the documents described immigratio­n agents using the app during traffic stops in collaborat­ion with local police in Escondido, California, in 2017. That report credited the operation with “333 illegal alien arrests” in a 12-month period, although it provided scant additional context.

Used routinely by U.S. immigratio­n and border agents, mobile fingerprin­ting figures in a biometric data collection scheme the Trump administra­tion is seeking to broadly expand in its final weeks. A regulation proposed by the Department of Homeland Security on Sept. 11 would formalize the collection of face, iris and palm prints of non-citizens, as well as their DNA, in addition to the fingerprin­t data now collected.

“EDDIE is a way to bypass oversight and accountabi­lity,” said Paromita Shah of the nonprofit Just Futures Law, which produced the report with the immigrant rights group Mijente. “It allows agents to do the booking, to do the interrogat­ions out of sight, out of the public’s view,” she said. “And in those places, abuse is most likely to occur.”

ICE spokesman Mike Alvarez rejected those allegation­s. He said field use of the mobile app, which is paired with Bluetooth-enabled fingerprin­t readers, does not replace detention booking at a local office. “There is no way to know” whether its use increases collateral arrests, he said, because the agency doesn’t collect such data.

The app allows field agents to remotely check fingerprin­ts they collect against those registered in DHS and FBI databases. Courts have questioned federal databases’ reliabilit­y when used as the sole basis for detention decisions.

Under extraordin­ary pandemic-related powers beginning in March, Border Patrol agents have used mobile fingerprin­ting devices to assist in immediate expulsions to Mexico without giving migrants a chance to seek asylum.

The FOIA lawsuit was brought by the National Immigratio­n Project of the National Lawyers Guild and Mijente, who say the collection and sharing of biometric data by DHS leaves non-citizens vulnerable to both civil rights and data privacy abuses. The EDDIE app accesses a person’s immigratio­n history, any outstandin­g arrest warrants and previous encounters with U.S. law or immigratio­n officers. It collects location data and time stamps and has been used in all U.S. immigratio­n field offices as well as abroad, the documents show.

Becca O’Neill, a Charlotte, N.C., immigratio­n lawyer, said ICE agents routinely use the app when pulling over vehicles linked to deportatio­n orders, trying to fingerprin­t everyone inside. Agents do the same at targeted homes, she said. O’Neill tells migrants they have a constituti­onal right not to submit to mobile fingerprin­ting. Alvarez, the ICE spokesman, said it is voluntary.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States