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  • 2011-01-30 (xsd:date)
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  • Kilmartin says Secure Communities program has proven record of focusing on violent and threatening criminals (en)
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  • Just days after he was sworn into office, Attorney General Peter F. Kilmartin made news by signing an agreement to implement a federal program called Secure Communities , which the federal government says it created to identify and deport illegal immigrants who have committed serious crimes. The decision came less than a week after Governor Chafee rescinded his predecessor’s executive order targeting undocumented immigrants. Among other things, Chafee’s decision ended a cooperative program between the state police and the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to enforce immigration laws. Under the Secure Communities program, fingerprints of arrested suspects are sent to the Department of Homeland Security, which checks them against a database of immigration violators and others. ICE then prioritizes whom it will take action against, based on the severity of the person’s criminal background and the threat he or she poses to communities. ICE plans to implement the program nationwide. It is now in use in 37 states, although it’s only statewide in seven. In a Jan. 11 news release announcing Rhode Island’s intent to join the program, Kilmartin said: Secure Communities is a proactive method of making neighborhoods safe by dealing with individuals who have committed crimes against us. The program has a proven track record of enhancing public safety by focusing on violent offenders and those that pose a threat to our communities and our national security. Kilmartin’s announcement triggered complaints from opponents of Secure Communities, and a noisy protest in the lobby of the attorney general’s building. Critics, including Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island Affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union, say the program has led to thousands of deportations of people with no criminal records. They also say it leads to racial profiling and deters victims and witnesses of crimes from coming forward if they or family members are undocumented immigrants. We wondered whether Kilmartin’s assertion -- that the program focuses on violent offenders and threats to our communities and national security -- was accurate. When we called Kilmartin’s office, his spokeswoman, Amy Kempe, said Kilmartin was relying on information from ICE and directed us to that agency. So we contacted Ross Feinstein, spokesman for ICE in Washington, D.C. He said in an email that in 2010, ICE set a record for overall removals of illegal aliens, with more than 392,000 removals nationwide. He said more than half of those removed were convicted criminals. Feinstein said the Secure Communities program alone, from its beginning in October 2008, has identified and led to the removal of more than 59,300 aliens convicted of crimes. We also found the program has plenty of critics. Three groups that oppose Secure Communities fought ICE in federal court and won a judgment ordering the agency to reveal data about the program. The groups -- the Center for Constitutional Rights, the National Day Laborer Organization and the Immigration Justice Clinic at the Cardoza School of Law at Yeshiva University in New York City -- are part of a national initiative called Uncover the Truth. Sarahi Uribe, national coordinator of Uncover the Truth, said the group obtained documents in recent months from ICE that show that the majority of the people picked up in the program are not hardened criminals. It’s amazing because they continue marketing the program as targeting serious criminals, even though the numbers don’t support it, Uribe said. Among the records obtained are monthly data for Secure Communities from October 2009 through August 2010. The records show that during that period, 41,929 people were identified through Secure Communities for deportation, as so-called removals and returns. Those people were divided into four categories based on criminal record. A total of 9,667 -- about 23 percent -- were classified as Level 1 offenders: those convicted of aggravated felonies such as murder, rape or sexual abuse of a minor. Another 16,581 -- about 40 percent -- were labeled as Level 2 offenders: those convicted of any felony, or three or more misdemeanors. A total of 4,621 -- about 11 percent -- were Level 3 offenders: those convicted of crimes punishable by less than one year in prison, typically misdemeanors. And 11,060 people -- about 26 percent -- had no criminal record at all. So ICE’s own data shows that, in the second year of a two-year program, 37 percent of the immigrants deported were either non-criminals or had been convicted of minor crimes. Asked to respond, ICE’s Feinstein said that the agency’s priority is to initiate enforcement against criminal aliens, but that doesn’t preclude ICE from initiating action against immigration violators and others subject to removal at the time of encounter. In fact, there are classes of non-criminals that are also ICE priorities. He said the so-called non-criminal aliens are non-U.S. citizens arrested and booked for a crime who have no recorded conviction but have one or more immigration violations and are priorities for ICE to remove due to various reasons, such as: visa overstay, an illegal entry, an illegal reentry after removal, a final order of removal in place, known gang affiliations, ICE fugitives, etc. Kempe, after checking back with ICE officials, said the attorney general believes people convicted of even relatively minor crimes -- selling marijuana, painting graffiti or vandalizing a neighborhood -- are threats to the community. That may be. But we believe that, in the light of the ICE data, Kilmartin went too far when he said Secure Communities has a proven record of focusing on violent offenders and threats to communities and our national security. That may be the intent, but the numbers show a mixed result. We rule his statement Half True. (en)
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