Illegal Alien News
Illegal Alien News
Sasha Aslanian, Minnesota Public Radio: Deportations Up In Minnesota
Jul 14th

St. Paul, Minn. — In the first four months of 2010, the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency deported 3,127 people from the five-state region that includes Minnesota — on pace to be one-third higher than last year.
The federal agency routinely visits county jails to determine which inmates are in the United States illegally.
Although federal immigration authorities say their top priority is deporting criminals, fewer than half of the people returned to their home countries had any criminal convictions. That troubles immigrant advocates, who complain that immigration officials are focusing too much on people without criminal records.
DAILY VISITS TO JAILS
Immigration agents visit the Hennepin and Ramsey County jails daily, looking through booking sheets for people who might be in the country illegally.
They can see which inmates self-report a country of origin other than the United States. They can meet with inmates to ask followup questions, and place holds on them. Inmates can be transferred to federal custody once local law enforcement finishes processing them.
Hennepin County has had a jail screening agreement in place for a number of years, and it has delivered results, pointing federal immigration agents to hundreds of people.
“Over the last three years, I’ve seen the number as high as 800,†said Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek, who runs the jail. “I think even through the first quarter of this year we’re on pace for about 650, maybe 700 folks who will self-report that they are in this country illegally.â€
Criminal Alien Program charges and deportations
Stanek said illegal immigrants account for nearly 2 percent of the 37,000 to 40,000 people booked into the jail each year. The Hennepin County Jail receives about $100,000 a year from the federal government to cover the administrative costs of the program.
The Ramsey County Jail in St. Paul also receives daily visits from federal immigration agents. Ramsey County Undersheriff Ryan O’Neill said he was contacted in 2007 by ICE’s assistant field office director to set up the program. The agency’s agreements with jail administrators do not require any county approval.
“Prior to that, I don’t think we were doing much with folks that they may be interested in,†said O’Neill. “We didn’t have anything in place to regularly contact them about folks that we, for whatever reason, would think were here illegally.â€
O’Neill estimates that immigration agents find up to 15 inmates a day at his facility, but neither he nor ICE could provide annual numbers.
In greater Minnesota, jail deputies can notify ICE when they suspect an inmate may be in the United States illegally, and the agency can pick them up when the jail is ready to release them.
In Austin, Minn., Mower County Sheriff Terese Amazi estimated her staff contacts ICE a few times every week. “About half our jail population is illegal,†Amazi said.
A decade ago, immigrants not legally in the country made up only 10 percent of the Austin jail population, Amazi said. Jail personnel recognize some inmates as people who have already been deported twice before.
CASTING A WIDER NET
Through May 24, jail screenings helped immigration officials identify and deport 2,738 people from the five-state area that includes Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa and Nebraska. Of the people deported, 1,359, or fewer than half, had been convicted of a crime.
Two of the deportees were family members of a 43-year-old temp worker from Minneapolis. Marcelina has seen five family members deported since last year. MPR News has agreed not to use her last name because she too is in the country illegally and fears deportation. Earlier this year, her 25-year-old daughter and 22-year-old sister were stopped while driving home from work.
“My sister was pulled over and since she didn’t have a license or any sort of ID, she was arrested,†Marcelina said. “My daughter was also in the car and was arrested, and then they were deported.â€
Traffic stops that lead to deportation are increasingly common.
Carl Rusnok, director of communications for ICE’s central region, said the agency aims to make sure criminal aliens aren’t released back into the streets. But agents have discretion on who they detain, he said.
“If our resources permit, there may be other people that we take into custody,†Rusnok said. “We can place detainers on anybody who is actually deportable from the United States. If you’re illegally in the country, then you’re deportable.â€
ICE became much more methodical in its jail screenings nationally in 2007. An internal reorganization helped boost the program and send more resources to jails across the country.
SANCTUARY CITIES, NOT JAILS
The arrangement federal immigration authorities have with county jails can conflict with efforts by local police who are trying to work with immigrant communities.
Minneapolis and St. Paul have what are called “separation ordinances.†Their beat cops don’t ask about immigration status.
That’s good policing, Minneapolis Police Chief Tim Dolan said. He needs witnesses, and crime victims to be willing to talk with his officers without fear of deportation. But he often gets grief from people who wish he would crack down on immigrants without legal status.
“I get more hate mail on this subject than anything I’ve ever gotten in my life,†Dolan said. “We’re not being soft on crime. We’re telling you right now the premise that these individuals are causes for increases in crime or violent crime — that’s not true.â€
Anyone Dolan’s officers arrest and book into the Hennepin County jail can have their immigration status checked by ICE.
Dolan has worked with the Mexican consulate to expand what forms of identification his officers can accept. Mexicans can show an ID card issued by the consulate. They would still face a penalty for driving without a license, but could avoid the trip to jail.
“We’re not looking to fill jails with people for traffic violations,†said Dolan. “We would love to be able to fill our jails with felons and people that should be there.â€
Staying out of jail is also the message coming from the Mexican consulate. Mexican Consul Ana Luisa Fajer receives daily notifications about Mexican nationals in custody. Fajer said her message to the community is prevention — follow all the laws and don’t get picked up.
“Don’t have the music up loud, have your proper lights, have your cars in good shape, don’t drink and drive. All the time! The focus is prevention, because when they are in immigration we cannot do anything and this is very sad,†Fajer said. “There are very sad stories about the separation of families.â€
Nonetheless, Fajer said she receives three times as many notifications of Mexicans being detained by immigration, compared to when she started a year and a half ago. She hears complaints that local authorities are increasingly stopping people who look like they don’t belong here.
“Profiling, yes. Racial profiling, it is there,†Fajer said. “This is happening. I’m telling you this because the community is telling me all the time.â€
BEHIND THE NUMBERS
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement memo to field agents leaked to the Washington Post earlier this year detailed stiff quotas for deportations, and suggested ways for field officers to boost non-criminal deportations. In response, ICE announced that it had withdrawn the memo and that the agency does not set quotas.
John Keller, executive director of the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, is concerned about oversight. He wonders if federal immigration authorities are focused on deporting criminals or if they have focused too much on those without criminal records.
Keller also questions whether the agency has effective complaint procedures to address when its enforcement efforts go too far. His office has defended U.S. citizens who have been caught up in deportation proceedings and held in custody for months.
“What we think is happening is that ICE itself is continuing to want to show an increase in the number — the raw number — of people that it’s removing from the United States,†Keller said. “And the only way they can do that is by getting the easiest people that fall into their laps.â€
Keller wants the agency to provide data on how many of the people being deported from the five-state region are serious criminals. An ICE spokeswoman said the agency does not have that information readily available.
Local jails can decide whether to participate in the agency’s screening program. But Congress has given the Department of Homeland Security a much bigger net to find criminal aliens.
By 2013, fingerprints from every person booked into a U.S. jail will automatically go into a Department of Homeland Security database. Almost 400 jurisdictions nationwide are already using the Secure Communities program. Minnesota has not yet been scheduled.
Source: http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2010/07/06/ice-jail-screenings/
Sara Kennedy, BRADENTON.COM: Will Florida Pass Tough Immigration Law?
Jul 13th
Bennett plans Arizona-style immigration bill
MANATEE — State Sen. Mike Bennett is in the process of drafting an Arizona-style legislative bill designed to ensure immigration laws are enforced in Florida, and “to stop our government officials from turning a blind eye to illegal immigration,†he said Thursday.
The Bradenton Republican plans to file the bill for consideration during the Florida Legislature’s session next spring, he said.
Its provisions will be modeled after a controversial new Arizona law already facing a legal challenge.
The Florida version would allow police who make a lawful stop, detention or arrest, or while enforcing another law, to require information regarding citizenship if reasonable suspicion exists that the person is an illegal alien, according to the Bradenton Republican’s office.
Additionally, it would permit law enforcement agencies to take illegal aliens into federal custody, according to Bennett’s office.
“We have too many people in our country here illegally, and it’s costing us in our social services, billions of dollars, and also costing us lost employment,†Bennett explained Thursday in a telephone interview.
The proposal might also solve some of the difficulties posed by gangs, said Bennett, who has previously filed bills on the topic of immigration.
“We have a lot of illegals participating in these gangs, in the narcotics areas,†he said. “We need to get a handle on it.â€
He emphasized that his purpose is not to stop immigration altogether.
“Our country is steeped in the strength and diversity of its immigrants,†Bennett said. “In fact, it is about honoring all those immigrants from all the years past who were committed to becoming American citizens under the laws of this country.
“… Our country is a land of immigrants, and the melting pot that we represent is also our strength; we welcome all who are willing to follow the law and do what is required to become legal American citizens,†he added.
The new Arizona law requires police investigating another incident or crime to ask people about their immigration status if there’s a “reasonable suspicion†they’re in the country illegally. It also makes being in Arizona illegally a misdemeanor, and it prohibits seeking day-labor work along the state’s streets.
The Obama administration sued Arizona on Tuesday to throw out the state’s toughest-in-the-nation immigration law and keep other states from copying it.
The lawsuit filed in federal court in Phoenix said the law, due to take effect July 29, usurps the federal government’s “pre-eminent authority†under the Constitution to regulate immigration.
Bennett’s proposal, which is still in the drafting stage, drew the ire of C.J. Czaia, a Bradenton attorney and former chair of the Manatee County Democratic Party, who said he was deeply disappointed to hear about Bennett’s bill.
“It’s racial profiling and discrimination against one group. If you’re brown and speak Spanish, you are the ones. It’s unconscionable, un-American and the worst kind of discrimination,†Czaia said.
Many of those without legal documents were brought to the United States by their parents, Czaia said. “What crime did these children commit?â€
The people targeted are the same ones who harvest America’s crops, work in restaurants and gardens, raise children, and help defend the United States in its military, Czaia said.
http://www.bradenton.com/2010/07/09/2420537/bennett-plans-arizona-style-immigration.html
“It’s an insult and racist, and the courts will not allow it to stand,†Czaia said.
Marvin Mills, secretary of the Manatee/Sarasota Farmworker Supporters, said that the Arizona law discriminates against Hispanics, is “mean-spirited, and has a very bad odor about it.â€
“It’s an ugly movement, and shouldn’t happen to Florida,†Mills said.
State Rep. Keith Fitzgerald, D-Sarasota, said Florida already possesses some of the powers that Bennett’s proposal outlines.
“It’s a little-known fact that we’re already empowered in Florida to stop people on the suspicion of being illegal immigrants,†Fitzgerald said.
They can be detained 72 hours, during which they are turned over to the federal immigration customs agency for processing, Fitzgerald said, adding, “It’s a federal program initiated in response to 9/11.â€
“Florida was one of the first states to join in,†he said. However, when police began stopping people, the federal agency became overwhelmed with its increased case load, and rarely followed up, Fitzgerald said.
“That points to the real source of the problem,†he said. “The federal government has not been enforcing the law. I would suggest that as a solution to the problem.â€
Source: http://www.bradenton.com/2010/07/09/2420537/bennett-plans-arizona-style-immigration.html
