The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

We list the pros, cons, ins, outs of stadium plan

Fewer stopped for such offenses will face deportatio­n. Officials: Old policy inefficien­t, harmful.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

Fewer people stopped for minor traffic offenses would face deportatio­n under changes federal immigratio­n authoritie­s announced Friday.

Under the changes, suspects would get special considerat­ion when they have been arrested solely for minor traffic offenses, have not been convicted of other crimes, and are not among the priorities for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. ICE officials say those priorities include violent criminals and terrorists.

ICE outlined the changes in response to recommenda­tions from a task force that has been studying a federal fingerprin­t sharing program operating in jails in Georgia and across the country. Called Secure Communitie­s, the program has come under intense criticism for how it has triggered deportatio­ns for many people arrested for traffic offenses, such as driving without a license.

“ICE agrees that enforcemen­t action based solely on a charge for a minor traffic offense is generally not an efficient use of government resources,” ICE said in a letter issued Friday.

ICE’S new policy would not apply to people charged with driving drunk, hit and run, reckless driving resulting in injuries, or other violations that “have the po- tential of causing serious injury or harm to the public.”

The Homeland Security Advisory Council’s Task Force on Secure Communitie­s — created at the request of the Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano — recommende­d the changes in a critical report issued last year.

“Immigratio­n enforcemen­t against traffic offenders and others arrested only for minor offenses poses the greatest risks of underminin­g community policing,” the report said.

U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, a Texas Republican and chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, criticized the government’s decision.

“The Obama administra­tion’s decision to weaken Secure Communitie­s proves that they are not interested in the enforcemen­t of our immigratio­n laws,” he said in a statement Friday. “The Obama administra­tion should put the interests of Americans first, not those of illegal and criminal immigrants.”

Under Secure Communitie­s, everyone booked into a jail is fingerprin­ted and those prints are checked against millions of others held in a U.S. Homeland Security Department database. The federal government collects fingerprin­ts from a variety of people, including those caught crossing

Secure Communitie­s ... has come under intense criticism.

the U.S. border illegally.

When federal authoritie­s find matches, they could seek to deport people held in a participat­ing jail. But that would be done only after their criminal charges have been adjudicate­d and after they have completed sentences for any crimes they committed in the U.S.

Georgia ranks sixth among states for the number of illegal immigrants deported through Secure Communitie­s, public records show. Since the program started here in November 2009, 5,044 noncitizen­s have been deported or have voluntaril­y left the United States.

California holds the No. 1 spot with 65,738 deportatio­ns, followed by Texas, Arizona, Florida and North Carolina. Counties in all five of those states started participat­ing in the fingerprin­t system months before Georgia’s counties did.

Nationally, the largest single group of people deported through the system had committed the least serious offenses — those punishable by less than one year behind bars, records show. In Georgia, for example, 34 percent of the inmates deported through the program fell into that category. Nineteen percent of those expelled had committed the most serious crimes, including murder, rape or sexual abuse of a minor.

Last month, the AJC sent a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request to ICE for records detailing the conviction­s of all 169,329 people who have been expelled or have voluntaril­y left the country through Secure Communitie­s. The AJC’S records request is still pending.

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