Today's Date: April 25, 2024
DoorDash Canada and Actress Catherine Reitman Partner to Champion On-Demand Grocery Delivery Across Canada   •   Ameresco Releases 2023 Impact Report on “Doing Well, by Doing Good: People, Planet and Policy”   •   Physicians Committee Doctors Offer 5 Nutritious Alternatives to Cow’s Milk for Consumers Avoiding Dairy Over Concern About   •   Across 26 US metros, majority of people say they have experienced housing discrimination   •   Experience Senior Living Welcomes Lisa Thompson as Senior Vice President of Operations   •   ADVANCE Launches Athlete National Sports Business Clearinghouse   •   'TikTokation': Over Four-in-Ten Canadian Gen Z Admit to Visiting Destinations Solely for Social Media Content - FlightHub Survey   •   Go1 Recognized on TIME and Statista’s 2024 World's Top EdTech Companies List   •   New American Funding Takes the Lead on Empowering Homeownership in Diverse Communities   •   Quest Diagnostics Foundation and Green Bronx Machine Expand Collaboration to Bring Acclaimed Indoor Gardening Curriculum to More   •   Students Traveling with EF Educational Tours and EF Explore America Going Cashless through Partnership with Till Financial's Fee   •   NetEase, Inc. Announces Filing of Annual Report on Form 20-F for Fiscal Year 2023 and Publication of 2023 Environmental, Social   •   Allonnia’s First Two Years of SAFF® in North America Raises PFAS Treatment Capacity to More Than 160 Million Gallons o   •   Ameresco’s Memphis LED Streetlighting Project Receives 2024 Smart 20 Award for Transformative City Infrastructure   •   Skillsoft Named a "Leader" in Enterprise Learning by Three Industry Analyst Firms   •   KKR to Acquire $1.64 Billion Student Housing Portfolio from BREIT   •   Domino's® is Tipping Customers Who Tip Their Delivery Drivers   •   iHuman Inc. Files 2023 Annual Report on Form 20-F   •   Liv by Kotex® Wants Moms to Laugh - and Pee a Little - this Mother's Day   •   Nexgen Packaging Opens Its African Headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya
Bookmark and Share

House Hearing Will Examine Problems With Local Immigration Enforcement

 
House Hearing Today Will Examine Problems With Local Immigration Enforcement
Agreements Between Localities And ICE Should Be Suspended Pending Further Review, Says ACLU
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 4, 2009
 
CONTACT: Linda Paris, (202) 675-2312; media@dcaclu.org
 
WASHINGTON – The House Homeland Security Committee will hold a hearing today to examine immigration enforcement agreements between localities and the federal government. As part of the hearing entitled, “Examining 287(g): the Role of State and Local Law Enforcement in Immigration Law,” the American Liberties Union will urge Congress to temporarily suspend and then provide long-overdue federal oversight of these agreements which have resulted in illegal profiling of Latinos.  Immigration enforcement by local law enforcement, including sheriffs, has also resulted in the unlawful detention and deportation of U.S. citizens and permanent residents.
 
“Immigration enforcement belongs in the hands of federal immigration agents trained in federal immigration and racial profiling laws, not in the hands of state or local law enforcement,” said Joanne Lin, ACLU Legislative Counsel. “Since immigration law is extremely complex and constantly changing, it is impossible for sheriffs to function effectively as both guardians of public safety and as immigration agents.”
 
In recent years, localities across the country have entered into agreements with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to enforce immigration law under section 287(g) of the Immigration and National Act. With these agreements between ICE and local law enforcement, the federal government has completely shirked its responsibility to exercise oversight and monitoring of the 287(g) program. The result has been abuse and illegal profiling by local law enforcement across the country -- all under the cloak of federal immigration authority.
 
In 2007, Pedro Guzman, a U.S. citizen born in California, was deported to Mexico after the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office wrongly turned him over to ICE for deportation. In Mexico, Mr. Guzman spent three months bathing in rivers and eating out of trash cans while trying to make his way back to the U.S.  
 
“Mr. Guzman fell victim to the local sheriff’s office which used its authority under the 287(g) program to refer him to ICE for deportation,” said Lin. “What kind of country do we live in when a U.S.-born citizen can find himself deported to a foreign country? Mr. Guzman’s case is one of many across the country illustrating how the 287(g) program has run amok.
 
“Now is the time for Congress to demand that the Department of Homeland Security suspend the 287(g) program and conduct a thorough review of all 287(g) programs across the country. Congress should hold field hearings in all of the jurisdictions where 287(g) programs have been in place for some time, such as North Carolina, Tennessee, Arizona, Arkansas and Southern California. The ACLU urges the Departments of Homeland Security and Justice to establish rigorous controls over the 287(g) program to safeguard against unlawful deportations of U.S. citizens and illegal profiling of people of color.”
 
In February, the ACLU of North Carolina co-authored a report on the 287(g) program in place in many counties in North Carolina. According to Rebecca Headen, staff attorney with the ACLU of North Carolina, “The 287(g) program has created a climate of racial profiling and community fear throughout the state of North Carolina. Local law enforcement has established immigration checkpoints in areas frequented by Latinos including churches, flea markets, and trailer parks. Latinos have been arrested for improper vehicle tags, driving without a license, and fishing without a license. State troopers and local sheriffs’ officers detained a bus with Latino passengers for hours for no reason other than the assertion they look foreign. Across North Carolina, Latinos now live under the constant threat that a trip to the grocery store or to Sunday worship could result in the deportation of their families.”
 
Nowhere are the accounts of police misconduct more egregious than in Maricopa County, Arizona, where Sheriff Arpaio and his deputies, pursuant to a 287(g) program, have engaged in a systematic campaign of illegal profiling of Latinos. Deputies have detained and arrested U.S. citizens in front of their family businesses. Latino-Americans have been selectively targeted for traffic citations, when their Caucasian neighbor counterparts are given oral warnings. 
 
The Maricopa County sheriff’s illegal profiling practices have been challenged in a class action lawsuit,
Ortega v. Arpaio, in which the ACLU is co-counsel. In February, a federal court ruled that the lawsuit against the Maricopa sheriff will proceed.
 
“Sheriff Arpaio may be the most notorious example of police abuse under the 287(g) program but he is not the only example,” said Dan Pochoda, Legal Director of the ACLU of Arizona. “Across the country local sheriffs are misusing and abusing their authority under the 287(g) program to harass Latino communities. Law enforcement practices that target people solely based on their color have no place in a free country.” 
 
For more information about the 287(g) report by the ACLU of North Carolina, go to http://www.law.unc.edu/documents/clinicalprograms/287gpolicyreview.pdf
 
For more details about the Ortega v. Arpaio case, go to http://www.aclu.org/immigrants/gen/35998lgl20080716.html#attach.
 
 



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News