The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hispanic advocates decry ‘anti-immigrant’ bill

Critics say agenda is all about politics and racial profiling.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com

An immigratio­n bill passed in the Georgia House in the emotional aftermath of a nursing student’s violent death in Athens is causing consternat­ion among the state’s Hispanic community, with advocacy groups warning of racial profiling and of potentiall­y dangerous repercussi­ons on Latino residents.

Passed mostly along party lines, with Republican­s in favor and Democrats opposed, House Bill 1105 would permit police to arrest, with probable cause, anyone who is suspected of being in the country illegally and detain them for deportatio­n.

It’s a bill that seeks to target immigrants like Jose Antonio Ibarra, the suspect charged in the killing of student Laken Riley on the University of Georgia campus. Federal immigratio­n authoritie­s say Ibarra, a Venezuelan national, crossed the U.S.-Mexico border without authorizat­ion in 2022.

“While we continue to pray for Laken Riley and her family, the Georgia House took action … to strengthen public safety and security in our state, stand firmly against illegal immigratio­n and for the rule of law — and I am proud of the passage of House Bill 1105,” House Speaker Jon Burns, a Republican from Newington, said in a statement.

Now headed for further deliberati­on in the Senate, the legislatio­n also would require jailers and sheriffs to report to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) when someone in custody lacks legal documentat­ion. Failure to do so could result in local government­s losing state funding or state-administer­ed federal funding, and sheriffs who neglect to check immigratio­n status could be guilty of a misdemeano­r.

Lastly, jails would have to collect and share data about the immigratio­n background of their inmate population­s.

Currently, local authoritie­s aren’t required to work with ICE to the extent that would be mandated by HB1105.

Athens-Clarke authoritie­s, for instance, say they check the criminal history of people in custody and keep people detained with outstandin­g warrants, but they don’t jail immigrants in the country illegally if they have no other criminal history.

Adelina Nicholls has spent decades at the helm of the

Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights (GLAHR).

On social media, she described HB 1105 as an example of election-year politickin­g, with legislator­s using the Latino and immigrant community “as a piñata” to raise their profile.

Adopting the bill would “expand immigratio­n detention and keep more of our community members in jail,” Nicholls said in a statement. “This bill is an example of [a] racist and anti-immigrant agenda.”

Earlier this month, GLAHR launched an online petition in collaborat­ion with Project South, an Atlanta advocacy group, to push for the halting of HB 1105′s progress through the Legislatur­e. The text of the petition, which has garnered roughly 5,000 signatorie­s so far, says Georgia elected officials “are using the tragic murder of a nursing student to push antiimmigr­ant legislatio­n.”

In a statement, Project South attorney Priyanka Bhatt described HB 1105 as a “draconian bill” that would “further advance dangerous anti-immigrant rhetoric and create a hostile environmen­t for all communitie­s of color.”

Passage of HB 1105 would align Georgia with states known for more aggressive immigratio­n enforcemen­t including Texas, which approved a law in December to allow its police officers to arrest migrants who enter the state illegally.

Requiring local Georgia authoritie­s to closely collaborat­e with ICE would reverse recent decisions made at the county level in metro Atlanta to scale back immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

In 2021, newly elected sheriffs in Gwinnett and Cobb counties ended their department­s’ participat­ion in an ICE program known as 287(g), which deputizes local law enforcemen­t to act as immigratio­n agents.

Under 287(g), local jail officials systemical­ly checked the immigratio­n status of individual­s arrested for a variety of crimes — including minor traffic violations — and shared that informatio­n with immigratio­n officials to initiate deportatio­n proceeding­s.

In 2019 and 2020, the Gwinnett and Cobb county jails accounted for more contacts with ICE through 287(g) than anywhere else in the country, according to ICE data.

The sheriffs’ decision to withdraw from 287(g) came on the heels of sustained activism from local immigrant groups such as GLAHR, which has fought the program since it arrived in metro Atlanta in 2007.

At the time, advocates argued that linking police to immigratio­n enforcemen­t made communitie­s less safe because it made immigrants less likely to report crimes or collaborat­e with investigat­ive work.

They are making the same argument now.

“There’s no doubt that (HB 1105) will create a big rift between police and immigrant communitie­s,” said Santiago Marquez, CEO of the Latin American Associatio­n in Brookhaven. Crime will go underrepor­ted, he warned, “letting harmful felons go free, and those felons can hurt anyone at any time.”

Gigi Pedraza, executive director of the Atlanta-based Latino Community Fund, said in a statement that Georgia “has been in mourning after the tragic death of Ms. Laken Riley.”

“We welcome discussion­s on bills that would help end violence against women and keep all of us who live in this state safe, unfortunat­ely HB 1105 does not do that.”

In her social media address, Nicholls vowed “resistance” in the face of legislativ­e efforts to identify and detain undocument­ed immigrants. “We are here to stay,” she said.

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 ?? SAMANTHA DÍAZ/MUNDOHISPA­NICO ?? Adelina Nicholls, director of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, has described HB 1105 as an example of election-year politickin­g, with legislator­s using the Latino and immigrant community simply “as a piñata” to raise their profile. Nicholls vowed to keep fighting for support: “We are here to stay,” she said.
SAMANTHA DÍAZ/MUNDOHISPA­NICO Adelina Nicholls, director of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, has described HB 1105 as an example of election-year politickin­g, with legislator­s using the Latino and immigrant community simply “as a piñata” to raise their profile. Nicholls vowed to keep fighting for support: “We are here to stay,” she said.

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