Post Tribune (Sunday)

Court blocks deal banning help for ICE

- By Tom Davies

INDIANAPOL­IS — A federal appeals court tossed out an agreement under which the sheriff’s department in Indianapol­is stopped detaining people based solely on U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t requests.

The ruling from the Chicago-based 7th Circuit Court of Appeals released Thursday comes after the Indiana attorney general’s office argued that a federal judge in Indianapol­is improperly approved the 2017 agreement settling a lawsuit against the Marion County Sheriff ’s Department.

The lawsuit claimed a man was wrongly jailed following an ICE detention request that was made without an arrest warrant.

Republican Attorney General Curtis Hill called the ruling a win for “state sovereignt­y” that allows enforcemen­t of a state law requiring police agencies to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“When federal authoritie­s ask an Indiana police agency to detain a person in the agency’s custody, Indiana law requires the agency to cooperate,” Hill said in a statement. “To establish any contrary policy at the local level not only violates Indiana law but jeopardize­s the safety and security of Hoosiers.”

The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana filed the original lawsuit on behalf of Antonio LopezAguil­ar, who was taken into custody by a sheriff’s deputy in 2014 after he appeared in traffic court on a misdemeano­r charge of driving without a license. The action came after a verbal detention request from an ICE agent and he spent a night in jail before being turned over to ICE, which later released him on his own recognizan­ce, according to court documents.

The lawsuit claimed LopezAguil­ar was held without cause, in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

U. S. Di st r i c t Judge Sarah Evans Barker approved the agreement between the ACLU and the sheriff’s department that prevented detentions for ICE without an arrest warrant or probable cause.

In its ruling, the appeals court said Barker wrongly denied an attempt by the attorney general’s office to argue that the agreement violated state law and ordered her to reconsider the agreement.

“In this case, the state has a fundamenta­l interest in the maintenanc­e of its legislativ­ely mandated policy to cooperate fully with the federal government in the enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws,” the ruling said. “It is certainly within the state’s exclusive purview to establish its expectatio­ns of the law enforcemen­t officers operating under its statutes.”

ACLU attorney Gavin Rose said it was reviewing its legal options with LopezAguil­ar.

The sheriff’s department said it reached the initial agreement after federal officials refused to defend the detention action in court.

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