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program will catch illegal immigrants in jails
By northcountytimes.com
Published: 05/31/2009

IMMIGRATION: New program will catch illegal immigrants in jails

Federal fingerprint databases now available to local law enforcement By EDWARD SIFUENTES -

A new program launched last week will make it easier to catch illegal immigrants who are booked into San Diego County jails, immigration and law enforcement officials said.

Called Secure Communities, the program allows law enforcement agencies to take a person's fingerprints and run them through FBI and Department of Homeland Security databases to determine whether the person is in the country illegally.

For years, the San Diego County Sheriff's Department, which runs the county's jails, has used Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to check the immigration status of people booked into its jails.

Now, that same information will be directly available to the Sheriff's Department and any police department with access to fingerprint databases.

Under the program, anyone whose fingerprints are checked at participating jails or local police departments will be immediately reviewed for immigration violations, said Robin Baker, Immigration and Customs Enforcement director of detention and removal operations in San Diego.

The agency launched the program in 50 counties nationwide, but San Diego County is the only one with the program in California, said Lauren Mack, a spokeswoman for the agency in San Diego.

Eventually, Immigration and Customs Enforcement plans to expand the program to all U.S. jails and prisons.

The $350 million program is being paid for by the federal government, officials said.

Undersheriff Bill Gore said the department will continue to provide space in its detention facilities, including the Vista jail, for immigration agents to question inmates regarding their immigration status, Gore said.

Pedro Rios, an immigrant rights activist, said he sees potential problems in the program.

"I'm concerned that there isn't any visible oversight that will ensure that this program will not be abused," said Rios, the San Diego director of the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker human rights organization.

Rios said overzealous officers might use the program to try to deport people on relatively minor violations.

But Baker said concerns about potential abuse of the program are unfounded.

He said the new program eliminates another frequent criticism: that Latinos are subjected to immigration scrutiny more often than people of other backgrounds.

Everyone booked into jails will be checked, not just those believed to have been born in another country, Baker said.

Immigration agents also will prioritize illegal immigrants who pose a threat to the public, including those convicted of major drug offenses, murder, rape, robbery or kidnapping, Baker said.

Baker said it is unclear exactly how many illegal immigrants are booked into county jails because not everyone is screened.

Agents base their reviews on a person's stated place of birth or other indications that a person might be a noncitizen.Read more.


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