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President George Bush
appointed Julie Myers chief of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Myers had no
previous immigration enforcement experience but was the niece of General Myers,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) who reported the program spent a total of
$625 million apprehending 72,000 undocumented persons that had no criminal
history or convictions.
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Maricopa County Sheriff Joe
Arpaio is doing exactly what
President Bush and Julie Myers
did in deceiving Congress
stating ICE was locking up
fugitives but rather was
apprehending undocumented
persons with no criminal
convictions for deportation the
same day.
Arpaio has also continually lied
to
Phoenix voters stating his
immigration sweeps search out
fugitives bur rather the
immigration sweeps are a
flagrant misuse of resources to
seek out the undocumented for
deportation. |
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Letter to US Attorney General
Requesting Investigation of Sheriff
Arpaio |
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Bush Lied to
Congress and America Using ICE to
Systematically Round Up Migrants for
Deportation (Just like Joe Arpaio)
WASHINGTON (By Nina Berstein, NYT)
February 4, 2009
—
The raids on homes around the country
were billed as carefully planned hunts
for dangerous immigrant fugitives, and
given catchy names like Operation Return
to Sender.
And they garnered bigger increases in
money and staff from Congress than any
other program run by Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, even as complaints
grew that teams of armed agents were
entering homes indiscriminately.
But in fact, beginning in 2006, the
program was no longer what was being
advertised. Federal immigration
officials had repeatedly told Congress
that among more than half a million
immigrants with outstanding deportation
orders, they would concentrate on
rounding up the most threatening —
criminals and terrorism suspects.
Instead, newly available documents show,
the agency changed the rules, and the
program increasingly went after easier
targets. A vast majority of those
arrested had no criminal record, and
many had no deportation orders against
them, either.
Internal directives by immigration
officials in 2006 raised arrest quotas
for each team in the National Fugitive
Operations Program, eliminated a
requirement that 75 percent of those
arrested be criminals, and then allowed
the teams to include nonfugitives in
their count.
In the next year, fugitives with
criminal records dropped to 9 percent of
those arrested, and non-fugitives picked
up by chance — without a deportation
order — rose to 40 percent. Many were
sent to detention centers far from their
homes, and deported.
The impact of the internal directives,
obtained by a professor and students at
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
through a Freedom of Information lawsuit
and shared with The New York Times,
shows the power of administrative memos
to significantly alter immigration
enforcement policy without any
legislative change.
The memos also help explain the pattern
of arrests documented in a report,
criticizing the fugitive operations
program, to be released on Wednesday by
the Migration Policy Institute, a
nonpartisan research organization in
Washington.
Analyzing more than five years of arrest
data supplied to the institute last year
by Julie Myers, who was then chief of
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the
report found that over all, as the
program spent a total of $625 million,
nearly three-quarters of the 96,000
people it apprehended had no criminal
convictions.
Without consulting Congress, the report
concluded, the program shifted to
picking up “the easiest targets, not the
most dangerous fugitives.”
It noted, however, that the most recent
figures available indicate an increase
in arrests of those with a criminal
background last year, though it was
unclear whether that resulted from a
policy change.
Peter L. Markowitz, who teaches
immigration law at Cardozo and directs
its immigration legal clinic, said the
memos obtained in its lawsuit reflected
the Bush administration’s effort to
appear tough on immigration enforcement
during the unsuccessful push to pass
comprehensive immigration legislation in
2006, and amid rising anger over illegal
immigration.
“It looks like what happened here is
that the law enforcement strategy was
hijacked by the political agenda of the
administration,” he said.
Kelly A. Nantel, a spokeswoman for the
immigration agency, defended the
program. “For the first time in history,
we continue to reduce the number of
immigration fugitive cases,” she said,
noting that the number of noncitizens at
large with outstanding deportation
orders, which peaked at 634,000 in the
2007 fiscal year, is now down to about
554,000. “These results speak for
themselves and they are consistent with
Congress’s mandate: locate and remove
immigration absconders.”
Ms. Nantel said the number of fugitives
with criminal backgrounds arrested in
the 2008 fiscal year rose to 5,652, or
16 percent of 34,000 arrests, and
non-fugitives fell to 8,062, or 23
percent.
Many Americans have welcomed roundups of
what the agency calls “ordinary status
violators” — noncitizens who have no
outstanding order of deportation, but
are suspected of being in the country
unlawfully, either because they
overstayed a visa or entered without
one.
But Michael Wishnie, one of the authors
of the report, who teaches law at Yale,
said that random arrests of low-level
violators in residential raids not only
raised a new set of legal and
humanitarian issues, including
allegations of entering private homes
without warrants or consent and
separating children from their
caretakers, but was “dramatically
different from how ICE has sold this
program to Congress.”
“If we just want to arrest undocumented
people,” he said, “we can do it much
more cheaply.”
Congressional financing for the fugitive
operations program rose to $218 million
in the 2008 fiscal year, from $9 million
in 2003, as the number of seven-member
teams multiplied to 104 from 8.
In Congressional briefings and public
statements since 2003, agency officials
have repeatedly said that given the vast
number of immigrants with outstanding
deportation orders, the program will
focus its resources on the roughly 20
percent with a criminal background.
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement
memo dated Jan. 22, 2004, underscored
that commitment: “Effective immediately,
no less than 75 percent of all fugitive
operations targets will be those
classified as criminal aliens” —
noncitizens with a criminal record as
well as an order of deportation. It
added that “collateral apprehensions” —
immigration violators encountered by
chance during an operation — would not
be counted in that percentage.
But on Jan. 31, 2006, a new memo changed
the rules. The directive, from John P.
Torres, acting director of the agency,
raised each team’s “target goal” to
1,000 a year, from 125.
And it removed the requirement that at
least 75 percent of those sought out for
arrest be criminals. Instead, it told
the teams to prioritize cases according
to the threat posed by the fugitive,
with non-criminals in the lowest of five
categories. And it repeated that
“collateral apprehensions will not
count” toward the 1,000 arrest quota.
But that standard, too, was dropped nine
months later. A new memo from Mr. Torres
said “nonfugitive arrests may now be
included” to reach the required 1,000
arrests. On average, however, it said at
least half of those arrested by each
team should be fugitives. It also
promised to “ensure the maximum
availability of detention space for
fugitive arrest operations.”
One result was an increase in
non-criminals held in immigration
detention. Another, the Migration Policy
Institute report concluded, was that the
percentage of criminal fugitives
arrested plummeted, to 9 percent in the
year that ended Sept. 30, 2007, from 39
percent in the 2004 fiscal year.
That same year, 15,646, or 51 percent of
those arrested, had an outstanding
deportation order, but no criminal
record, and 12,084, or 40 percent, were
termed “ordinary status violators” who
did not fit any of the program’s
priority categories.
The report said the program relied on a
database riddled with errors, and that
many deportation orders were issued
without the subject in court, sometimes
because of faulty addresses.
The looser rules were reflected in
sweeps like one conducted in New Haven
in June 2007. During the raid, lawyers
at Yale’s immigration law center said,
agents who found no one home at an
address specified in a deportation order
simply knocked on other doors until one
opened, pushed their way in, and
arrested residents who acknowledged that
they lacked legal status.
Of the 32 arrested and scattered to
jails around New England, only 5 had
outstanding deportation orders, and only
1 or 2 had criminal records.
Throughout history
there have been tyrants and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the
end they always fall. Think of it — always. Mahatma Gandhi