ICE Strikes Agreements with State & Local Law Enforcement
Assistant Secretary for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) John Morton announced standardized Memorandums of Agreement (MOAs) with 67 state and local law enforcement agencies to participate in 287(g) partnerships-improving public safety by prioritizing criminal aliens who are a threat to local communities, ensuring consistent and uniform policies and providing a force multiplier for ICE’s immigration enforcement efforts across the country.
The media has been all over this story as it concerns the Maricopa County Sheriff Arpaio meltdown when the Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano ordered him to stop arresting suspects based solely on the fact that they are illegal aliens. The Arizona sheriff who has been called the “toughest” in America, defiantly said he will continue his sweeps which have netted thousands of illegal aliens. He says that he can still operate within the law, under Arizona human smuggling laws – and told reporters, “it’s all politics”.
The new ICE partnerships include the Jail Model, in which local law enforcement agencies designate Jail Enforcement Officers to identify aliens already incarcerated within their detention facilities who are eligible for removal, as well as the Federal Task Force Model, in which agencies designate officers to work with Federal agents in locating, processing and removing criminal aliens from the United States.
- 55 agreements have been signed by ICE and the partnering agency;
- 12 agreements have been reached and await approval by the local jurisdiction’s supervisory authority; and
- Six agreements have negotiations underway.
- Six jurisdictions did not re-sign the new 287(g) agreement or withdrew during negotiations for a variety of reasons, including implementation of the Secure Communities program, budgetary constraints and limited program utilization.
We link to the ICE News Release for more on this story.
Tags: 287(g), ICE, ICE MOA's, Illegal Aliens, IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT, John Morton, Sheriff Arpaio