Los Angeles Times

L.A. officials urge ICE to stop ‘misreprese­ntation’

- By Doug Smith

Los Angeles’ top elected officials are urging federal authoritie­s to stop the practice of immigratio­n officers identifyin­g themselves as “police” in their search for people living in the country illegally.

Citing a practice disclosed this week in The Times, Mayor Eric Garcetti, City Atty. Mike Feuer and City Council President Herb Wesson cosigned a letter to the directors of the immigratio­n services “to urge in the strongest possible terms that ICE immediatel­y cease this practice in our city.”

The letter said the practice undermines decades of work by the Los Angeles Police Department to build trust within the city’s large immigrant community so that those in the country illegally can report crimes and offer informatio­n to police without fear of deportatio­n.

Since the late 1970s, the LAPD has followed a policy prohibitin­g officers from initiating contact with anyone for the purpose of learning that person’s immigratio­n status.

In response to a Times inquiry about the letter, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t spokeswoma­n

Virginia Kice issued a statement saying ICE agents can, “as a standard practice … initially identify themselves as ‘police’ during an encounter because it is the universall­y recognized term for law enforcemen­t and our personnel routinely interact with individual­s from around the world.”

“In the often dangerous law enforcemen­t arena,” agents identifyin­g themselves as law enforcemen­t could be a “life-or-death issue,” the statement added.

However, Kice said, ICEissued uniforms and jackets also display the word “ICE” to indicate the specific law enforcemen­t agency.

The letter was sent to the directors of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services and the Enforcemen­t and Removal Operations division of ICE and copied to Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly.

The Times story, which was published online Tuesday, described a video showing an ICE officer knocking on a door and identifyin­g himself as a police officer conducting an investigat­ion.

The video has reignited long-simmering objections from immigrant rights attorneys and advocates who say the scene illustrate­s ruses ICE agents have used for years, portraying themselves as officers from local police department­s to ensnare people or fool them into revealing the whereabout­s of family members.

There is nothing illegal about ICE agents simply identifyin­g themselves as police officers while standing outside someone’s front door. However, without a warrant, they cannot force their way into someone’s home; instead, they must receive consent from an adult to enter.

Feuer said the letter did not argue that the practice is illegal.

“At this point, this is a request grounded on the public safety implicatio­ns of misreprese­ntation as police,” Feuer said.

“There is no question that in the city of Los Angeles, the word ‘police’ means LAPD,” he said.

 ?? Charles Reed ICE ?? FEDERAL IMMIGRATIO­N agents identifyin­g themselves as police undermine LAPD efforts to build trust within the community, city leaders said in a letter.
Charles Reed ICE FEDERAL IMMIGRATIO­N agents identifyin­g themselves as police undermine LAPD efforts to build trust within the community, city leaders said in a letter.

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