By Matt Ferner
Federal immigration agents, kicked out of Los Angeles County jails several months ago, will be allowed to return to identify undocumented inmates for potential deportation, Sheriff Jim McDonnell said this week.
McDonnell said in a letter to county supervisors that the new policy will allow U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents access to inmates who have committed serious crimes and who are not protected under a 2013 state law that restricts collaboration between local cops and federal immigration officials.
The new policy mandates that sheriff’s deputies assigned to jails will give ICE up to seven days of notification before an inmate deemed potentially deportable is to be released, so that immigration officials can begin the deportation process. Those inmates will be notified of an ICE detainer and their right to legal council.
County supervisors just months ago ended a similar program that allowed ICE agents to work inside jails and train deputies to spot inmates eligible for deportation. The new plan appears to limit the federal agents’ access.
At least two of the five county supervisors backed the sheriff’s move. Tony Bell, assistant chief deputy for Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, told The Huffington Post in an email that Antonovich’s office is in “support” of the effort.
Supervisor Hilda Solis, who led the effort to boot ICE from county jails, said she generally supported the new policy, but cautioned that it may actually expand ICE access to jails.
“My top priority continues to be prohibiting ICE agents from having a permanent home in our jails with unfettered access to inmates in our care,” Solis said. “In the past, this led to abuses like racial profiling that are simply not acceptable.”
McDonnell said in his letter that the new policy considers the “complex and passionate positions of groups on both sides of the immigration debate.” …read more
Source:: Weed Feed
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