Los Angeles Times

County to pay out $ 14 million

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

More than 18,500 people were kept in jail past their release dates on immigratio­n holds, suit alleged.

Los Angeles County on Tuesday agreed to pay $ 14 million to settle a class- action lawsuit alleging that the Sheriff ’s Department routinely held people in jail beyond their release dates solely because of pending immigratio­n investigat­ions.

More than 18,500 people who were held illegally for days, weeks or months from October 2010 to June 2014 because of requests from U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t could qualify for a share of the settlement, attorneys for the plaintiffs said. The Sheriff ’s Department agreed to stop honoring detainer requests in 2014.

“It should send a very strong message to law enforcemen­t agencies around the country who continue to blindly comply with ICE’s requests that are patently unlawful,” said Jennie Pasquarell­a, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union who represente­d the plaintiffs.

Lindsay Battles, another attorney for the plaintiffs, said the case is significan­t because it establishe­s that for years, the Sheriff ’s Department “callously denied immigrants constituti­onal

protection­s that universall­y apply to all other jail detainees — including the right to post bail and the right to be released from custody under the same terms as any other arrestee or jail detainee.”

The ACLU said that each class member is eligible to receive from $ 250 to $ 25,000, depending in part on how long they were held. Any leftover money will go toward programs that provide legal aid to people in L. A. County facing immigratio­n consequenc­es because of an arrest or conviction, plaintiffs’ attorneys said.

The lawsuit was f iled against former Sheriff Lee Baca in 2012 by British f ilm

maker Duncan Roy, who said he spent nearly three months in L. A. County jails without a chance to post bail after his 2011 arrest. Roy said that the Sheriff ’s Department denied his requests to post $ 35,000 bail because of an ICE hold.

A federal judge concluded in 2018 that holding inmates beyond their release dates under civil immigratio­n detainers violated their 4th Amendment rights.

A judge still needs to sign off on the settlement agreement, which was unanimousl­y approved by the county Board of Supervisor­s on Tuesday.

The Sheriff ’s Department’s policies and practices have changed significan­tly since the lawsuit was filed.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva said Tuesday that the settlement should be paid by the county’s general fund, not out of the Sheriff ’s Department budget, arguing that it’s not fair to slap his department for the mistakes of previous sheriffs when he has been proactive about keeping ICE out of the jails.

“Both sheriffs, Baca and [ Jim] McDonnell, they cooperated with ICE. ICE was in the facilities. They facilitate­d the transfers of inmates to ICE’s custody,” Villanueva told the board. “I kicked ICE out of the jails, and I banned all transfers of inmates to custody of ICE.”

Villanueva stopped the Sheriff ’s Department’s participat­ion in a federal grant that required sending federal officials personal informatio­n about inmates who were in the country illegally. In April, he put a moratorium on ICE transfers over concerns about conditions at immigratio­n detention facilities during the COVID- 19 pandemic. He made the moratorium permanent in August, banning inmate transfers to ICE unless the federal agency obtained a judicial warrant.

 ?? Reed Saxon Associated Press ?? FILMMAKER Duncan Roy, right, f iled the suit after he spent nearly three months in jail on an ICE hold.
Reed Saxon Associated Press FILMMAKER Duncan Roy, right, f iled the suit after he spent nearly three months in jail on an ICE hold.

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