Los Angeles Times

Deport efforts to focus on serious offenders

- cindy.chang@latimes.com

iffs met with Morton.

“The serious criminals who are coming back into this country and committing more crimes, they’re the ones who should be in jail, not the low-level offenders,” spokesman Steve Whitmore said.

Previously, federal agents were instructed to treat misdemeano­r offenders as a low priority but were not prohibited from issuing detainer requests for them.

The detainers instruct local jailers, typically sheriffs, to hold an arrestee for up to 48 hours longer than the person’s criminal charge would have allowed, giving immigratio­n authoritie­s more time to take them into custody.

Under the new policy, federal agents may issue detainers only for those convicted or charged with a felony; those with three or more misdemeano­r conviction­s, excluding traffic offenses and other minor crimes; and those whose misdemeano­rs are more serious, such as offenses involving violence or driving under the influence.

The misdemeano­r exemption does not apply to people who have previously been deported or who are considered a threat to national security.

ICE also announced that it deported 409,849 people in fiscal year 2012 — a record number, compared with 291,060 in 2007.

About 55% of the 2012 deportees were convicted of felonies or misdemeano­rs, the agency said.

Of the more than 230,000 people deported through Secure Communitie­s since the program’s inception in 2008, about 30% were convicted of a crime no more serious than a misdemeano­r, according to ICE statistics.

Immigratio­n advocates, while heartened by Friday’s policy change, cited the statistics as evidence that the Obama administra­tion acted too late and has far more ground to cover.

“There are such a large number of people targeted through this program, who if this had been in effect since the beginning, would not have been deported,” said Jennie Pasquarell­a, an immigratio­n attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California.

Pasquarell­a and others said the state’s Trust Act, vetoed by Gov. Jerry Brown in September, was still necessary. A newly rewritten bill would prohibit local law enforcemen­t from complying with ICE detainers except if the person has been convicted of a serious or violent crime.

“The new guidelines still allow for an excessive dragnet that will break up families, undermine trust in local law enforcemen­t and be a drag on California’s economy,” said Tom Ammiano (DSan Francisco), the bill’s author.

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