BILL WOULD HALT INMATE MOVES TO IMMIGRATION AUTHORITIES
Among the inmate firefighters who battled massive California wildfires last year was Bounchan Keola, a Laotian immigrant who had been sentenced to 28 years in prison for a gang-related shooting when he was 16.
The state later turned him over to federal immigration authorities, and advocacy groups are again spotlighting his case in an effort to win approval of a bill that would prohibit state prisons from transferring inmates to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Keola was released by ICE in January but knows his future in the United States is fragile. He is a legal resident, having fled Laos with his parents when he was 2, but federal law allows the deportation of immigrants with certain criminal convictions.
Keola told reporters Wednesday that he felt “painfully betrayed by (the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation), thinking that this is what they do to people who risk their lives to protect peoples’ homes from wildfires.” Keola said he could be deported at any moment to Laos, “a country I have no ties to.”
California law prohibits local police and sheriffs from cooperating with federal immigration authorities for some crimes, but it doesn’t apply to the state prison system. California prison officials routinely cooperate with immigration authorities, advocates say, transferring released inmates to their custody to begin deportation proceedings.
A previous version of the bill was vetoed by Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2019.
“It is time to end the double punishment of immigrant Californians,” said Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, a Los Angeles Democrat who introduced the new bill. “We do not need to devote valuable time and resources on unnecessary ICE transfers.“
Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat and a co-author of the bill, said the pandemic lent additional urgency to keeping immigrants out of detention. ICE had 14,397 people in custody nationwide last week, down from more than 56,000 in 2019 and largely a result of efforts to contain the spread of the virus.