| Tearing Down State and Local Immigration Enforcement |
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| Written by Jena Baker McNeill and Matt A. Mayer |
| Wednesday, 15 July 2009 07:34 |
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Section 287(g) Revisions: Tearing Down State and Local Immigration Enforcement One Change at a Time by Jena Baker McNeill and Matt A. Mayer WebMemo #2543 On Friday, July 9, the Obama Administration announced plans to revise the Memorandums of Agreement (MOAs) that are negotiated under section 287(g) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA). The section 287(g) program is designed to allow state and local law enforcement agencies to enforce federal immigration laws. For participating cities and states, this program is a critical tool for enforcing America's immigration laws, because it has become a force multiplier for the under-resourced Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The MOA changes, however, undercut the motivation of jurisdictions to participate in the program by forcing prosecutors and law enforcement to prosecute illegal immigrants for the underlying crime instead of simply processing them for removal. Furthermore, they limit the ability of law enforcement officers to check immigration status to that of only minor offenses. Essentially, without saying so, they gut the force-multiplier purpose of 287(g). These changes are driven entirely by political special interests and are not representative of the positive contribution section 287(g) makes toward enforcing immigration laws. The Obama Administration should not move forward with these changes, and it should instead promote the expansion of section 287(g) and similar programs. Section 287(g) In 1996, Congress created section 287(g) programs as an amendment to the INA. For six years, ICE failed to use the powers authorized in section 287(g). Starting in 2002, ICE started allowing state and local law enforcement agencies to enter into MOAs. Under section 287(g), law enforcement entities entered into agreements with ICE in order to "act in the stead of ICE agents by processing illegal aliens for removal." Before officers could participate, state and local law enforcement would sign MOAs with ICE and undergo a five-week training course, background check, and mandatory certifications. Section 287(g) was a solid improvement in terms of enforcing immigration laws. Before it was created, a state and local law enforcement officer who apprehended an individual who could not demonstrate legal presence in the U.S. would simply notify ICE and wait for them to come and get the individual. In practice, this meant most illegal immigrants went free and immigration laws were not enforced. In the seven years since ICE started using section 287(g), roughly 66 state and local agencies have entered into MOAs resulting in roughly 1,000 law enforcement officers being "deputized" to enforce federal immigration law. Even more importantly, over 120,000 individuals have been identified as illegal immigrants under the program. Changes to the MOAs Section 287(g) has experienced great success. This program and other ICE ACCESS programs help fight crime, getting gang leaders and other serious criminals off of the streets and, if they are illegal, removed from the United States. But in the last year, groups such as the ACLU and other pro-illegal immigration groups, as well as a U.S. Government Accountability Office report, have claimed that section 287(g) programs encourage racial profiling and have other undesirable consequences. Their accusations, however, are not supported by real data or proof that such actions were occurring. In reality, opponents of section 287(g) have often been groups that are in favor of less immigration enforcement. On July 9, the Obama Administration caved to these demands. It announced plans to make the MOAs "more uniform." The changes announced go to the heart of the program and will disrupt any real attempt to enforce the law, including:
The Wrong Approach American simply cannot afford to lose section 287(g). Although not a panacea in itself to America's illegal immigration problem, it is one of the most useful and efficient tools that can be used to curtail illegal immigration. Any workable section 287(g) program must be flexible and implemented in a way that respects the Constitution and existing laws; recognizes the professionalism, experience, and know-how of state and local law enforcements; and preserves this highly valuable program. A better way forward would include the following:
It seems illogical to begin dismantling ICE on the same day 11 new jurisdictions are being added to the program. The only viable outcome that will result from the changes to the MOAs is that few, if any, state and local law enforcement agencies will participate in the program. This is death by stealth and too-clever-by-half inside the Beltway tradecraft. If the Obama Administration wants to end the section 287(g) program, it should make its case--in an open and transparent fashion--to Congress and the American taxpayers. Otherwise, the Obama Administration should rethink its choice to revise the MOAs and ensure that state and local law enforcement retain the flexibility needed to make decisions without federal mandates and second-guessing. Jena Baker McNeill is Policy Analyst for Homeland Security in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. Matt A. Mayer is a Visiting Fellow at The Heritage Foundation, President and Chief Executive Officer of Provisum Strategies LLC and an Adjunct Professor at Ohio State University. He has served as Counselor to the Deputy Secretary and Acting Executive Director for the Office of Grants and Training in the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Trackback(0)
Comments (2)
![]() written by Judi Purcell, July 15, 2009
Thanks for this information. I had just read somewhere that states need to be able to protect their states etc. Too good to be true.
In the meantime, the thinking is that the leading democrats in the senate and congress will strip out the recently approved workforce enforcement (E-Verify) in committee like they did last winter. Millions of unemployed Americans and returning veterans are counting on us to let them know we won't tolerate demolishing what was just pa*sed in the senate. Sign the petition at NumbersUSA to leave E-Verify alone: http://www.numbersusa.com/petition?ID=4 Right now 65,517 citizens have signed since July 12! Sign and ask everyone you know to do the same. Your petition will immediately be delivered electronically to the White House.. Write comment
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In the meantime, the thinking is that the leading democrats in the senate and congress will strip out the recently approved workforce enforcement (E-Verify) in committee like they did last winter.
Millions of unemployed Americans and returning veterans are counting on us to let them know we won't tolerate demolishing what was just pa*sed in the senate.
Sign the petition at NumbersUSA to leave E-Verify alone:
http://www.numbersusa.com/petition?ID=4
Right now 65,517 citizens have signed since July 12! Sign and ask everyone you know to do the same. Your petition will immediately be delivered electronically to the White House..