Boston Herald

Plymouth jail ends ICE deputy program

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A Massachuse­tts jail is ending an agreement that deputizes some of its staff to act as immigratio­n agents.

Plymouth Sheriff Joseph McDonald said Friday in an interview on WATD-FM that his office has notified U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t that it is terminatin­g a program that dates to the early 1990s.

But he said the jail will still continue to house immigratio­n detainees, despite calls from immigrant rights advocates to also end that arrangemen­t.

The jail is the lone remaining facility housing ICE detainees in the state, with some 77 in custody as of late last month, according to federal data.

McDonald cited staff shortages as the primary driver for ending the program.

“Right now we just don’t have the staffing or wherewitha­l to keep it going,” he said. “We really can’t afford to send anyone away for training.”

A spokespers­on for ICE’s Boston office didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

Lawyers for Civil Rights, a Boston group, said the sheriff’s decision comes after a state judge ruled in July that a lawsuit it filed challengin­g the sheriff’s authority to enter into the agreement could proceed.

Laura Rotolo, of the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachuse­tts, said opponents have long argued that the agreements waste state taxpayer dollars by needlessly entangling local agencies with federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Massachuse­tts is the only state in New England where the contracts are in place; Barnstable County and the state Department of Correction are the remaining entities with the agreements.

In May, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security cut ties with the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office, including ending its similar contract and another arrangemen­t to house immigratio­n detainees, citing complaints of inhumane conditions at its jail in North Dartmouth.

 ?? Matt StoNe / HeraLd StaFF FILe ?? ARRESTED DEVELOPMEN­T: Plymouth sheriff’s deputies will no longer be deputized as immigratio­n agents — a move necessitat­ed by staff shortages, Sheriff Joseph McDonald says.
Matt StoNe / HeraLd StaFF FILe ARRESTED DEVELOPMEN­T: Plymouth sheriff’s deputies will no longer be deputized as immigratio­n agents — a move necessitat­ed by staff shortages, Sheriff Joseph McDonald says.

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