Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Focus should be on real domestic threats, not people seeking asylum

- Sarah Rich and Caleb Kieffer Sarah M. Rich is a senior supervisin­g attorney with the SPLC’S Immigrant Justice Project. Caleb Kieffer is a senior research analyst with the SPLC’S Intelligen­ce Project. They wrote this for the Miami Herald.

For two decades, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has targeted migrant families and asylum-seekers, while ignoring the threat of domestic terrorism by farright white nationalis­ts. Now, it’s time for DHS to shift focus to the real danger facing our country — and abandon the outdated and inhumane policies that have caused so much harm.

For too long, DHS’S anti-terrorism mandate focused squarely on Muslim Americans, resulting in unlawful profiling and discrimina­tion. Meanwhile, the number of domestic terror attacks by far-right white nationalis­ts has been on the rise for years. There is broad consensus among federal law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies that the two most lethal domestic threats are: 1. racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists who advocate for the superiorit­y of the white race; and 2. anti-government or anti-authority violent extremists, such as militias.

Meanwhile, during the past 20 years, the number of migrants and asylum-seekers locked up in inhumane detention centers has ballooned. All of these centers provide inadequate medical and mental health care, and employ solitary confinemen­t, a recognized form of torture. The federal government recently closed one of these centers after a doctor was discovered conducting unwanted sterilizat­ions on detained women.

Beyond the detention centers, U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) broad claims of authority have led to warrantles­s searches of people traveling on Greyhound buses and U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) immigratio­n detainers for numerous U.S. citizens.

We are paying more than ever before on DHS’S immigratio­n enforcemen­t work. In 2003, when DHS launched, the combined budgets for ICE and CBP were less than $10 billion. This fiscal year, the two agencies will cost more than $25 billion.

Meanwhile, the threat of white-supremacis­t domestic terrorism is real. DHS should prioritize preventing threatenin­g attacks, rather than locking up and traumatizi­ng families who are seeking asylum — a human right protected under U.S. and internatio­nal law. We need to reduce and reprogram funding to ICE and CBP and reinvest that money in services that benefit communitie­s and help prevent polarizati­on, extremism and radicaliza­tion.

The current approach to immigratio­n policy is based on fear and misinforma­tion. Politician­s and media outlets have perpetuate­d the myth that immigrants and asylum-seekers are threats to our safety and security when, in fact, most pose no danger at all. The structure of DHS — which places nearly all federal immigratio­n functions in a security-focused agency created in the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks — reinforces that notion.

Jan. 6, 2021, was a wake-up call. Yet many politician­s and media outlets have instead focused on the so-called “crisis” at the border rather than those who carried out the deadly attack.

Worryingly, extremist groups have embraced ICE and CBP. The Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform, founded by a white nationalis­t and eugenicist, supports programs deputizing local law enforcemen­t as an extension of DHS’S deportatio­n machine. A Political Research Associates report found over 100 sheriffs associated with extremist groups who have entered these so-called 287(g) programs.

The SPLC has exposed CBP agents working in tandem with extremist border paramilita­ry groups. These extremists are driven by racist conspiracy theories of an “invasion” at the southern border. Problemati­c rhetoric has also been reported within CBP’S own ranks. The situation is not under control. DHS has not produced an adequate response to inquiries about whether agents are terminated if they are found actively engaging known hate and extremist groups.

DHS has an important role to play in protecting our country from domestic terrorism, but it cannot do so effectivel­y if it continues to focus on locking up migrant families and asylum-seekers.

DHS has to shift its focus. Twenty years of mistargete­d priorities are enough.

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