Los Angeles Times

Nearly half of 6,200 migrants in ICE data breach are released

U.S. will help affected deportees who wish to return and seek asylum, officials say.

- By Hamed Aleaziz

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials have released nearly 3,000 immigrants whose personal informatio­n, including birthdates and detention locations, was inadverten­tly posted online by the government, according to U.S. officials.

In late November, officials accidental­ly posted to the agency’s website the names, birthdates, nationalit­ies and detention locations of 6,252 immigrants who claimed to be fleeing torture and persecutio­n. Immigrant advocates criticized the disclosure, saying it could put people at risk.

ICE will not deport any immigrants affected by the disclosure until they have a chance to raise the issue in immigratio­n court, officials said. But more than 100 immigrants whose informatio­n was leaked already had been deported by the time the breach was discovered. Another group — fewer than 10 people, officials said — was deported shortly after the data leak but before those migrants were notified. The agency is willing to help those deportees who wish to return to the U.S. and seek asylum, officials added.

Many immigrants who seek safety in the U.S. fear that gangs, government­s or individual­s back home will find out that they did so and retaliate against them or their families. To mitigate that risk, a federal regulation generally forbids the release of personal informatio­n of people seeking asylum and other protection­s without approval by top Homeland Security officials.

“Although inadverten­t, ICE put lives at risk through this data breach. The commitment­s ICE has made to those impacted will go a significan­t way toward mitigating the harm done, but only if ICE is diligent and transparen­t in making good on its promises,” said Heidi Altman, director of policy at the National Immigrant Justice Center, an immigrant advocacy organizati­on.

The agency should take more proactive action, however, Altman said, and guarantee the safe return of the immigrants already deported so they can make new claims for asylum.

Curtis Morrison, an immigratio­n lawyer in California, said he is planning to file a lawsuit on behalf of more than a dozen immigrant detainees who claim the disclosure put them in danger.

The agency’s “actions are not sufficient to mitigate the harm of ICE’s data breach,” Morrison said in an email Thursday.

ICE’s disclosure of the more than 6,000 names triggered a massive effort by the agency to investigat­e the causes of the error and reduce the risk of retaliatio­n against immigrants whose informatio­n was exposed.

The agency has been contacting immigrants whose informatio­n was posted online, including several hundred people who already had been released from custody by the time the informatio­n was posted.

The agency mistakenly published the data during a routine update of its website Nov. 28. Human Rights First notified ICE officials about the mistake, and the agency quickly deleted the data. The file was posted to a page where ICE regularly publishes detention statistics. The informatio­n was up for about five hours.

“Though unintentio­nal, this release of informatio­n is a breach of policy and the agency is investigat­ing the incident and taking all corrective actions necessary,” an ICE spokespers­on said in a statement.

Thus far, about 2,900 immigrants named in the leak have been released from custody. An additional 2,200 still in custody will have their cases reviewed for potential release.

ICE officials will allow some immigrants affected by the data disclosure to seek asylum even if they would not normally have been eligible. The agency will not oppose efforts to reopen cases of immigrants affected by the leak.

In December, the Department of Homeland Security inadverten­tly tipped off the Cuban government that some of the immigrants the agency sought to deport to the island nation had asked the U.S. for protection from persecutio­n or torture.

A Homeland Security official communicat­ing with the Cuban government about deportatio­n flights to the country “unintentio­nally” indicated that some of the 103 Cubans who could have been placed on a flight had been affected by the late November data breach, ICE officials told Congress in December.

The Homeland Security official did not name any specific individual­s. But telling Cuba that some of the potential deportees had been affected by the ICE leak amounted to confirming that they had sought shelter in the U.S. Every person whose informatio­n was leaked had sought U.S. protection, and the leak was widely covered in U.S. media.

None of the 103 Cubans have been removed, and ICE officials said that about 90 have been released from U.S. custody as of early January, agency officials said this week.

In December, several members of Congress, including Reps. Norma Torres (D-Pomona) and Nanette Diaz Barragán (D-San Pedro), sent a letter to ICE leadership demanding answers on how the initial leak happened.

“We believe that ICE’s failure to comply with simple regulation­s to protect asylum seekers have potentiall­y endangered the lives of these vulnerable individual­s and their families and urge you to take immediate action to ensure the privacy of this and other sensitive informatio­n held by the agency,” the letter stated.

“We are deeply troubled by this news because federal law mandates that the informatio­n of people seeking asylum is to be kept confidenti­al,” the letter said. “Several of us frequently receive visits from individual­s risking life and livelihood to help their communitie­s thrive in the face of repressive regimes. Some of these courageous individual­s go on to seek asylum in the United States — and it is unacceptab­le to put their informatio­n into the hands of bad actors.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? IMMIGRATIO­N AND Customs Enforcemen­t posted migrants’ names, birthdates, nationalit­ies and detention locations, potentiall­y putting them at risk, advocates say. Above, an ICE agent in Montebello in 2017.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times IMMIGRATIO­N AND Customs Enforcemen­t posted migrants’ names, birthdates, nationalit­ies and detention locations, potentiall­y putting them at risk, advocates say. Above, an ICE agent in Montebello in 2017.

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