Connecticut Post

U.S. limits immigratio­n arrests at schools, ‘protected’ areas

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WASHINGTON — U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s will limit arrests at schools, hospitals and other “protected” areas under guidelines issued Wednesday by the Department of Homeland Security, part of a broader effort to roll back the approach to enforcemen­t under President Donald Trump.

Agents and officers are being directed to avoid making arrests or carrying out searches at a range of sensitive locations “to the fullest extent possible,” according to a memo from DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas outlining the policy.

It is the latest in a series of immigratio­n policies under President Joe Biden aimed at taking a more targeted approach to enforcemen­t. The policy is similar to one under President Barack Obama that restricted arrests at churches and schools.

The new policy includes not just schools but medical and day care facilities, playground­s and recreation centers as well as demonstrat­ions and rallies.

It also further alienated Biden critics who say weaker enforcemen­t encourages migrants to seek to enter the country illegally. The Trump administra­tion sparked criticism for seeking to arrest and remove anyone in the country illegally regardless of criminal history or community ties, though DHS also operated under a sensitive locations policy that limited enforcemen­t actions in churches and other places.

Guidelines issued earlier this year for immigratio­n enforcemen­t directed agents to focus on recent border crossers, national security threats and people who have committed serious crimes. DHS also imposed limits on arrests at courthouse­s when people showed up for other matters and ended mass worksite raids.

Mayorkas has argued that his agency does not have the resources to pursue all of the estimated 11 million people in the country without legal status and that it should focus on those who pose the greatest risk to society.

In announcing the new policy guidelines, the secretary said agents and officers should consider “broader societal interests“and the impact of their activities on communitie­s.

“We can accomplish our law enforcemen­t mission without denying individual­s access to needed medical care, children access to their schools, the displaced access to food and shelter, people of faith access to their places of worship, and more,“Mayorkas said.

The list of protected areas includes broad categories such as “a place where children gather” and “a place where disaster or emergency response and relief is being provided,” an expansive policy that marks a significan­t shift for an agency that includes U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Border Patrol.

The Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform, a staunch critic of Biden policies, blasted the guidelines as a “handy list of safe places from enforcemen­t.”

Exceptions include when the action involves a national security threat; if there is an imminent risk of death, violence or physical harm to a person; if it involves the “hot pursuit” of someone who poses a public safety threat and someone who was personally observed crossing the border without legal authorizat­ion.

Other exceptions would be if there is an imminent risk that evidence material to a criminal case would be destroyed or if a safe alternativ­e location does not exist.

Otherwise, agents or officers would have to get approval before taking an enforcemen­t action “in or near” a protected area, the memo said.

The Biden administra­tion has struggled to deal with large numbers of migrants seeking to cross the U.S.-Mexico border, though the total encountere­d has declined the past two months following more than a year of monthly increases.

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