Chattanooga Times Free Press

ICE was not notified of Laken Riley suspect’s earlier police encounters

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U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas acknowledg­ed Sunday that the Venezuelan suspect accused of killing nursing student Laken Riley had previous run-ins with the law, but said federal immigratio­n authoritie­s were not alerted.

Jose Antonio Ibarra, 26, entered the U.S. illegally in 2022, authoritie­s say.

Police charged Ibarra on Feb. 23 with several crimes, including malice murder, in the death of Riley. The 22-year-old student was found dead the day before in a wooded area on the University of Georgia’s campus after not returning home from a run.

The slaying has become the latest flashpoint in the heated national debate over immigratio­n policies and enforcemen­t.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, or ICE, have said New York police arrested Ibarra in September 2023 and charged him with a motor vehicle license violation and acting in a manner to injure a child. He had reportedly ridden a moped with a child passenger who wasn’t restrained or wearing head protection.

In 2023, officers from the Athens-Clarke County Police Department in Georgia apprehende­d Ibarra and his brother, issuing them citations after they were accused of stealing about $200 worth of food and clothing from a Walmart. They were not arrested.

“We were not notified in this instance,” Mayorkas said in a television appearance on CBS News’ Face the Nation on Sunday, when asked about Ibarra’s two prior detentions by local law enforcemen­t.

Critics of local jurisdicti­ons that limit coordinati­on with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s say Riley’s death could have been prevented if police in New York or Athens were tougher on immigratio­n enforcemen­t and had alerted ICE that apprehende­d Ibarra.

Mayorkas, speaking on CBS, said Sunday that there are “varying degrees of cooperatio­n” between local and state law enforcemen­t and federal immigratio­n authoritie­s. He did not comment specifical­ly on the degree of cooperatio­n between ICE and authoritie­s in New York and Athens.

Immigratio­n lawyers told The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution last week it’s unlikely Ibarra would have been detained earlier by ICE from his previous run-ins with police, given the minor charges, even if those incidents had occurred in local jurisdicti­ons that cooperate more closely with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Athens-Clarke authoritie­s said last week it is standard practice to issue citations for certain misdemeano­r crimes, including shopliftin­g. It said its officers don’t have immediate access to immigratio­n status, which is typically checked by jailers during the booking process of an arrestee.

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