Congress: Refocus Immigration Arrests

Story summary:

While the nation's immigration cops have raided job sites and picked up illegal immigrants across the country in the past year, hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants sit in jails, already convicted of crimes. Yet they often are released back into the community instead of being deported. This week in Congress, Democrats -- with almost no resistance from Republicans -- are trying to force the Bush administration to focus more on the criminals and less on workers, directing $800 million to Immigration and Customs Enforcement to make deportations of criminal immigrants its top priority.

Congress: Refocus Immigration Arrests

Congress is urging the Bush administration to place more emphasis on deporting criminal illegal immigrants rather than rounding up undocumented workers.

Miami Herald
6-26-08

While the nation's immigration cops have raided job sites and picked up illegal immigrants across the country in the past year, hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants sit in jails, already convicted of crimes.

Yet they often are released back into the community instead of being deported.

This week in Congress, Democrats -- with almost no resistance from Republicans -- are trying to force the Bush administration to focus more on the criminals and less on workers, directing $800 million to Immigration and Customs Enforcement to make deportations of criminal immigrants its top priority.

That means more money to ferret out criminals in jails, for the federal-local 287(g) partnerships that deputize local law enforcement officers as federal immigration officers, and for the fugitive immigrant teams that pick up wanted suspects.

But some of those programs, while focused on criminals, round up non-criminals as well.

Homeland Security records show, for example, that fugitive teams last year captured nearly six times as many non-criminals as they did convicted criminals.

Many immigrant advocates also fear that federal-local partnerships such as the 287(g) program are leading to racial profiling in Latino communities.

Rep. David Price, D-N.C., the chairman of the House of Representatives Appropriations Committee's homeland security subcommittee, pushed the effort this week. Price is shepherding next year's spending package for the Department of Homeland Security. It passed a key House committee Tuesday and now goes to the House floor.

Capturing criminal illegal immigrants is ''one thing everybody agrees on that has to be at the top of the list, and yet they haven't done it,'' Price said in an interview Tuesday.

Not everyone agrees.

''What he's saying is he doesn't want to enforce our immigration laws except on a narrow group of people,'' said Steven Camarota, research director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington think tank that advocates for immigration restrictions.

``He's saying he doesn't really want the law enforced.''

To ferret out illegal immigrants, Camarota said, the federal government must focus on workers and the employers who hire them.

That happened last year.

Federal agents increased their workplace arrests of non-criminals by 816 percent in 2007 over 2003, scooping up 4,077 undocumented immigrants who had no criminal records, according to numbers the agency provided to the House Appropriations Committee.

Many of those jailed and deported left behind U.S.-born children, a reality that's been borne out in other raids and has angered immigrant advocacy groups.