Las Vegas Review-Journal

Metro stops detaining some offenders for ICE

Sheriff says he took action in December

- By Mike Shoro Las Vegas Review-journal

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo directed correction­s officers in December to stop placing immigratio­n holds on undocument­ed immigrants with low-level traffic bench warrants.

The sheriff said he took the action Dec. 21. The directive applies to an agreement made with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, known as a 287(g) agreement, which deputizes officers to act as immigratio­n agents. Under the agreement, Metropolit­an Police Department officers check whether people booked into the county jail are wanted for deportatio­n proceeding­s and then detain them for ICE.

Lombardo sent a statement Wednesday to the Las Vegas Review-journal in reference to a rally Feb. 7 outside Metro headquarte­rs protesting the department’s cooperatio­n agreement with the immigratio­n agency.

“As I appreciate people’s right to protest, these changes were made as a result of good policy and my intent to address the worst violators of criminal law,” he said in that statement.

The change applies to people with only low-level traffic bench warrants, Lombardo said in a statement posted on social media.

“I was not forced to change policy,” he said. “I made the change because it was the right thing to do when I did it.”

It was not immediatel­y clear whether that policy has been formalized in writing.

In an interview Tuesday, Metro lobbyist Chuck Callaway said that Lombardo had heard stories of people with families in Las Vegas or who had lived in the country for years who found themselves facing deportatio­n for a violation as minor as a traffic ticket.

“The sheriff wants to ensure that something like that doesn’t occur,” he said.

Callaway had signaled the change to lawmakers Friday, when he was asked about the 287(g) agreement at a Nevada Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing.

“I know that the jail is in the process of moving forward with that,” he told lawmakers.

Metro will continue to notify ICE about undocument­ed individual­s accused of more serious offenses, those with significan­t criminal histories and those who have been deported multiple times, Callaway said.

Callaway said he doesn’t think the change will harm the department’s relationsh­ip with ICE.

Asked for comment, ICE spokeswoma­n Paige Hughes emailed a statement to the Review-journal.

“The partnershi­p between the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department remains an effective program for enhancing the safety and security of the Las Vegas communitie­s,” the statement reads in part. “The current 287(g) memorandum of agreement states that ICE enforcemen­t priorities are agreed to and will be followed.”

Reached Tuesday, Clark County Commission­er Tick Segerblom expressed optimism about the change but said he wants to see how it plays out in practice.

“It’s a positive step,” he said. Segerblom joined the activists outside Metro headquarte­rs on Feb. 7 to call for changes to Metro’s cooperatio­n with ICE.

In a statement, the Arriba Las Vegas Worker Center welcomed acknowledg­ment of the problem but said the directive doesn’t address concerns that people may still be targeted for deportatio­n over minor crimes.

Segerblom said he remains concerned about the practice of questionin­g those arrested about their citizenshi­p status, adding that everybody should feel comfortabl­e interactin­g with the police free of fear.

“That’s not a question that should be asked,” he said.

Amy Rose, legal director of the ACLU of Nevada, said changing the policy is a great idea but “absolutely not enough.”

“We really want to see them stop that policy entirely,” she said.

Local law enforcemen­t holding people for ICE violates Fourth Amendment due process protection­s against detention without probable cause, particular­ly for a civil matter like immigratio­n, Rose said.

She was also skeptical of the public declaratio­n of a change without seeing the policy in writing.

At last Friday’s hearing, Callaway told lawmakers that Metro officers do not take immigratio­n enforcemen­t actions on the streets.

“We believe that it deteriorat­es partnershi­ps with the community and it also makes some folks afraid to come forward to report crime or to interact with officers,” Callaway said.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter.

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Joe Lombardo

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