WASHINGTON – The American Civil Liberties Union
filed a Freedom of Information Act request Tuesday for new documents governing
the continued delegation to state and local law enforcement agencies of federal
immigration enforcement authority. The fundamentally flawed program has been
associated with serious civil rights abuses and public safety concerns.
Secretary Janet Napolitano announced Friday that
the Department of Homeland Security had developed a new standardized Memorandum
of Agreement (MOA) for use when it delegates immigration enforcement authority
to specific agencies under Section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act. She also announced that DHS had entered into new MOAs with 11 additional
law enforcement agencies. However, DHS refused requests by journalists and the
public to release the 11 recently-signed MOAs and the new standardized
agreement, even though DHS routinely made 287(g) MOAs public under the Bush
administration.
“No amount of tinkering with the 287(g) program is
likely to solve the fact that it threatens public safety and undermines the
basic guarantee of equal treatment by increasing profiling of people who look
or sound ‘foreign,’” said Omar Jadwat, staff attorney with the ACLU Immigrants’
Rights Project. “Still, DHS’s refusal to disclose these new documents is a
disappointing and legally unsupportable step back from with Bush administration
practice and makes it impossible to fully evaluate the changes to this highly
controversial program. DHS should immediately release the documents we have
requested.”
The ACLU has long sought to end the 287(g)
agreements between DHS and state or local agencies that are, by design,
fundamentally flawed. The 287(g) agreements have encouraged illegal
racial profiling and civil rights abuses as well as the mistaken and unlawful
detention and deportation of U.S. citizens and permanent residents, as
reflected in a series of lawsuits, all while diverting scarce resources from
traditional local law enforcement functions.
“Enforcement of immigration law, like tax law,
belongs exclusively to the federal government. One body of immigration
law governs the entire country; those laws are written and passed by Congress
and should be enforced by federal law enforcement, not by local and state
police,” said Joanne Lin, ACLU Legislative Counsel. “There is a
specialized federal agency to focus on immigration enforcement – DHS – just as
there is a specialized federal agency to focus on tax compliance and
enforcement – the IRS. State and local police do not pull drivers over
for tax law violations; likewise they should not pull drivers over for
immigration law violations. The 287(g) program has proven to be a failure
-- resulting in rampant illegal profiling by local police under the cloak of
federal immigration enforcement power. DHS needs to terminate, not tweak,
the 287(g) program.”
This past April, the Police Foundation, a leading
nonpartisan, research and training nonprofit dedicated to improving public
safety, reported that many sheriffs and police chiefs across the country
disapprove of the local immigration enforcement program. According to the
Police Foundation study, law enforcement executives believe that “immigration
enforcement by local police undermines their core public safety mission,
diverts scarce resources, increases their exposure to liability and litigation,
and exacerbates fear in communities already distrustful of police.”
In recent months, Congress held two oversight
hearings and heard from U.S. citizens who have been profiled and detained by
local police acting under 287(g) programs. In addition to charges of
287(g) program “mismanagement” by the Government Accountability Office, the DHS
Inspector General has undertaken an audit of the 287(g) program and the
Department of Justice has launched a civil rights investigation into the
Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office, which has an extensive 287(g) program.
In February, a federal court decided that a class
action lawsuit, Ortega Melendres v. Arpaio, could proceed against
Sheriff Joe Arpaio. In that case, the ACLU is co-counsel for Latino plaintiffs
who were subjected to racial profiling and police misconduct by the Sheriff’s
Office in Maricopa County, Arizona, a jurisdiction with the most aggressive
287(g) program in the country. In another case, the ACLU has sued on
behalf of Pedro Guzman, a U.S. citizen born in California, who was illegally
deported under Los Angeles County Sheriff Office’s 287(g) program. These cases
are still pending.
“If the Department of Homeland Security cannot
recognize failure when everyone else involved sees it, Congress should exercise
its oversight and monitoring responsibilities to end the 287(g) program,” added
Lin. “Minor modifications are not enough to fix this fundamentally flawed
program.”