Napolitano wants to Expand ICE
Enforcement and
287 (g) Program with Arpaio
WASHINGTON (By Tom Barry, Americas
Policy Program) February 20, 2009 —
Rather than pulling back from Chertoff's
initiatives to involve state and local
governments in immigration enforcement,
Napolitano is apparently interested in
increasing this intergovernmental
cooperation. With respect to the
controversial 287(g) program, which she
says "provides for agreements whereby
federally trained and supervised state
and local law enforcement officials can
participate in the investigation,
apprehension, and transport of
unauthorized aliens," Napolitano asks,
"What can be done to expedite more
agreements," and "How does this model
compare in cost, effectiveness, and
administration, to other forms of
cooperation?"
Napolitano's immigration and border
security directive isn't a statement of
policy or strategy. But it is an
indicator of how she will direct
immigration enforcement and border
control. Those who were expecting the
former border governor and federal
prosecutor to call a halt to the
immigrant crackdown and to the
post-Sept. 11 border build-up will be
sorely disappointed.
With the enforcement-first approach
firmly in place at DHS, the new
secretary is now signaling her
commitment to iron out the wrinkles of
the enforcement-first approach,
including detention standards and the
efficiencies of federal-local
collaboration.
In a January 30 departmental directive
on immigration and border control,
Napolitano says: "Smart, resolute
enforcement by the department can keep
Americans safe, foster legal immigration
to America, protect legitimate commerce,
and lay the groundwork for a more
comprehensive reform." It is the last in
an initial series of 11 directives
issued by Napolitano.
In this new directive, she poses a
series of questions to departmental
officials responsible for immigration
law enforcement and border security and
expects reports back to her by February
20.
The new directive will certainly
disappoint those hoping for a rejection
of Chertoff's law-and-order regimen for
immigration by Napolitano and the Obama
administration. Instead of rejecting the
enforcement-only approach as inhumane,
Napolitano seems intent on rationalizing
and finessing the crackdown launched by
her predecessor, while making
improvements around the edges.
Napolitano is following the lead of
congressional Democrats in insisting DHS
place yet greater attention on deporting
"criminal aliens" and fugitives. For the
past two years the Democrat-led House
and Senate committees increased the
president's proposed budget for
deporting "criminal aliens."
Democrats like Sen. Robert Byrd (WV) and
Rep. David Price (NC) insisted DHS
prioritize criminal alien deportation.
Price also recommended DHS end its
workplace raids and instead use time and
money to remove all criminal immigrants.
Napolitano apparently wants to expand
the Secure Communities Program, an
adjunct of DHS' Criminal Aliens Program
designed "to identify and remove aliens
unlawfully present who are involved in
criminal activity." In her recent
directive, Napolitano asks Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials:
"How can we best accelerate its Secure
Communities development and expansion?"
As Arizona governor, Napolitano deployed
the National Guard to the border to
assist the Border Patrol. Now as DHS
chief, she is exploring new DHS
cooperation with Guard units. She asks:
"What overarching plans exist for
coordinating with the Guard at the
border? How could the arrangements for
the Guard's presence be made more
effective for support of DHS missions?"
Napolitano is also seeking increased
state and local cooperation in the DHS'
effort to locate imprisoned and jailed
immigrants so that they will be
immediately deported upon release. "What
measures are needed," she inquires,
rightfully, "and with what priority, to
secure expansion of this resource-saving
program?"
After September 11 and as a complement
to the USA Patriot Act, the Bush
administration created Fugitive
Operations Teams to hunt down "fugitive
aliens." Initially, immigrants deemed a
threat to national security were the
priority, but finding few of these, the
teams began casting a wider and wider
net, prioritizing those with criminal
records deemed dangerous to communities,
and secondarily those with misdemeanors.
From only a couple of dozen teams at the
creation of DHS in early 2003, the
department now has 104 seven-person
teams deployed around the country.
"How can fugitives be more effectively
prioritized for these purposes and what
steps can be taken to expedite removal?"
she asks. And in evident recognition of
the mounting criticism the raids by the
Fugitive Operations Teams are resulting
in an increasing proportion of
"collateral" arrests, she advises the
department should "clearly differentiate
the number of fugitives that are
actually removed versus those aliens
unlawfully present who are simply
encountered by the teams while on
assignment."
As a candidate, Obama declared his
support for an employment verification
program that would make it impossible
for undocumented immigrants to find
employment in the economy's formal
sector. While the DHS has postponed the
required implementation of the E-Verify
Program, Napolitano's directive
indicates DHS is committed to
instituting the program as a key
component of its strategy to enforce
immigration law. Recognizing the problem
of "false negatives" and "false
positives," she seems intent on
improving the reliability of the
program, rather than rejecting it, as
immigrant-rights, civil-libertarian, and
labor organizations advocate.
"Reducing unauthorized employment is
crucial for controlling the problem of
illicit migration," states Napolitano.
"E-Verify has been a key component in
proposals for comprehensive immigration
reform and holds real promise as a
central element in effective immigration
enforcement that combines border efforts
with interior measures."
"How can DHS expand such monitoring,
including alternative strategies such as
electronic detection of suspicious
patterns, with an indication of resource
requirements? What role could
data-mining or other innovative
strategies play in helping to identify
false positives and false negatives?"
are among the questions she wants
answered.
Her latest directive also contains a
small section devoted to immigrant
detention. She asks if the detention
standards are adequate, if they apply to
all detention centers used for ICE
detainees, and what corrective actions
are taken if the standards are violated.
In a sign that may recognize the
validity of criticism that immigrant
detention is often unnecessary,
Napolitano asks, "What are the
prospects, advantages, and disadvantages
of expanding the use of community-based
alternatives to detention or of less
restrictive models of detention?"
There is also a section on southbound
arms smuggling in the wide-ranging
directive, indicating the new DHS
chief's concern about the "growing wave
of criminal violence in Mexico's border
communities and in the interior of the
country, fueled by the availability of
guns and currency smuggled south from
the United States."
"Please explain," she says, "how these
efforts to obstruct arms smuggling will
be enhanced with funding from the Merida
Initiative and how this is being
coordinated with the states and the
Office of National Drug Control Policy."
There will likely be some changes around
the edges, such as improved detention
standards and monitoring, but no
rethinking of immigration enforcement
and border security will likely come
from Napolitano. No questions or
concerns about the multitude of issues
and problems that resulted from the
security-driven campaign to fortify the
border and round up suspect immigrants
— the value of the border wall, the
central role of private prisons in
immigrant detention, the wisdom of U.S.
drug policy with respect to border
drug-related violence, the decreased
attention to political asylum and
refugee policy, the consequences of
workplace raids, etc.
— are being raised.
A professional bureaucrat and
politician, Napolitano is busy
organizing, systematizing, and improving
the crackdown Chertoff so zealously
spearheaded.