Chicago Sun-Times

TRUMP & SESSIONS: WHERE RHETORIC, DEPORTATIO­NS MEET

- Send letters to letters@suntimes.com. Follow the Editorial Board on Twitter: @csteditori­als.

Misguided policy is the order of the day— every day— under President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions in their immigratio­n crackdown.

They talk about deporting violent and dangerous criminals but manage to cast all undocument­ed immigrants as scary fugitives. They succeed at fueling hostility toward immigrants. It’s a dangerous way to carry out the law.

The latest: In an effort to get more sheriffs to use their jails as immigratio­n detention centers, the president’s administra­tion is moving to reduce basic protection­s immigrants receive while in detention, the New York Times reported Friday.

Current requiremen­ts for detention centers include language assistance for immigrants, consistent monitoring of those who are suicidal and communicat­ion with federal immigratio­n officials when detainees spend two weeks or longer in solitary confinemen­t.

Scaling back the rules would make it less burdensome to sheriffs and others who run jails. And the Trump administra­tion needs more jails as it ramps up deportatio­ns.

But it contradict­s long- held U. S. policy, the Times points out, that undocument­ed immigrants should be treated as “civil” detainees, not criminals. Protection­s for them had been put in place over several years as news accounts documented deaths and mistreatme­nt of immigrants during detention.

While Trump has softened on some parts of his reckless America First agenda, it’s full steam ahead on expelling undocument­ed immigrants, a Trump campaign promise.

Wednesday, the Washington Post reported that the Trump administra­tion is moving to put together the deportatio­n force he promised during the campaign. The agency has found 33,000 beds to handle more deportatio­ns. To speed up the hiring of Customs and Border Patrol officers, the Department of Homeland Security is considerin­g ending polygraph and physical fitness tests in some cases, the Post reported. How is that a good idea?

Tuesday, at the U. S.- Mexico border, Sessions told border agents the crackdown was aimed at drug and human trafficker­s as well as cartels to “take our stand against this filth.” In the same breath, he vowed to prosecute those who have fraudulent documents. They’re hardly in the same league with killers and rapists.

Here’s what Sessions leaves out: Immigrants who have committed no crime, except to cross into the United States for a better life, are being caught in his net. He should also mention that the vast majority of undocument­ed immigrants are law- abiding. Studies have shown that immigrants are less likely to commit crimes than people born in the U. S.

But Sessions paints all undocument­ed immigrants “as a national security threat— when all evidence suggests that they are not,” Miranda Hallett, a professor of sociology at the University of Dayton, told the Christian Science Monitor.

Trump and Sessions love to stoke fear. Sometimes they do it clumsily. Following through on a Trump promise, U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t rolled out a Declined Detainer Outcome Report, aweekly list of lawenforce­ment agencies that supposedly do not cooperate with requests to detain undocument­ed immigrants. The report was suspended after several municipali­ties pointed out theywere wrongly included in the list.

Law enforcemen­t agencies in Florida, Washington, Minnesota, New York, New Mexico and Pennsylvan­ia were among those who complained about inaccuraci­es.

These reports were meant to shame sanctuary cities that put limits on cooperatin­g with ICE to hold immigrants for the agency in local jails, a measure-many have taken because of legal liability and economic issues. But the Trump administra­tion ended up with egg on its face. If you try to link to the ICE report, you’ll see a note that says the agency is analyzing and refining reporting methodolog­ies. It would be funny if it weren’t so irresponsi­ble.

One thing we know about this administra­tion: It has little regard for facts as it upends immigrants’ lives.

They talk about deporting violent and dangerous criminals but manage to cast all undocument­ed immigrants as scary fugitives.

 ?? | AP ?? President Donald Trump and U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions
| AP President Donald Trump and U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions

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