Progress Report: Is DHS Making the Grade?

Asylum, Border Enforcement, Criminality, Department of Homeland Security, Immigration Blog, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Reform, Refugee, USCIS, White House No Comments »

Yesterday marked the seventh anniversary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and its immigration agencies: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). It also corresponds to the due date set by Secretary Janet Napolitano for completion of a sweeping internal review of DHS. While the internal review results have never been made public, an external review reveals that DHS is struggling with the challenges of reform—both administrative and legislative—and finds itself attempting to create more humane ways to enforce broken laws, which is ultimately a losing proposition.
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Supreme Court to Decide Whether Long Term Resident Can Be Deported Based on Possession of Anxiety Drug

Congress, Courts, Criminality, Deportation, Immigration Blog, Immigration Law, Reform, Supreme Court No Comments »

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would decide whether a permanent resident who was convicted of a second drug possession offense can be deported without an opportunity to make a case for why he should be allowed to remain in the United States. This case, which will resolve a split in the federal courts, will affect hundreds of immigrants who face deportation each year. It also serves as an unfortunate reminder that we still struggle with the adverse effects of the overbroad and unforgiving immigration laws passed by Congress in 1996.
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Shenandoah is a Cautionary Tale for How to Debate Immigration Reform

Congress, Courts, Criminality, Demographics, Employment, Enforcement, Human Rights, Immigration Blog, Myths, Police Enforcement, Restrictionists, Undocumented Immigration 1 Comment »

This week a police chief and two of his officers were charged with obstruction of justice in connection with their investigation of the beating death of Luis Ramirez, a 25-year-old undocumented Mexican immigrant, in Shenandoah, PA, last year. The two teenagers acquitted of his murder were also indicted on federal hate crime charges. While some measure of justice may eventually be served in the Ramirez case, this tragedy should serve as a cautionary tale as we move into 2010 and gear up for a new round of immigration reform debates. Policy makers and the media must understand that when the debate devolves from reasoned, fact-based discussions into fear and hate-mongering the consequences can be dire.
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Napolitano Looks for Comprehensive Way Forward

Border Enforcement, Congress, Criminality, Department of Homeland Security, Deportation, Detention, Employment, Enforcement, Human Rights, Immigration Blog, Immigration Law, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Labor, Legislation, President Obama, Raids, Reform, Secretary Napolitano, Undocumented Immigration No Comments »

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano testified in an oversight hearing today before the Senate Judiciary Committee. While reinforcing her commitment to securing our borders and enforcing our immigration laws in smart and effective ways, Napolitano also reaffirmed her commitment to immigration reform as a way to strengthen our immigration enforcement policies—a commitment that includes, as Secretary Napolitano notes, responsibility and accountability from everyone involved:
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Is Secure Communities Making our Communities Secure?

Criminality, Department of Homeland Security, Enforcement, Human Rights, Immigration Blog, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Police Enforcement, Reform, Undocumented Immigration 1 Comment »

The Secure Communities Program—the latest partnership between Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and local jails to identify and deport “criminal aliens” —is over a year old and is growing by leaps and bounds. To date, there has been very little public information available about what Secure Communities is, how it works, and what the results have been. However, a new IPC report, The Secure Communities Program: Unanswered Questions and Continuing Concerns, released today highlights early evidence from Secure Communities—and experience with other ICE programs—that suggests this new program may not be living up to its name and may not be effectively making our communities more safe.
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CIS Report Attempts to Erase 100 Years of Research

Criminality, Enforcement, Immigration Blog, Police Enforcement, Research, Restrictionists 2 Comments »

A new report from the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), Immigration and Crime: Assessing a Conflicted Issue, attempts to overturn a century’s worth of research which has demonstrated repeatedly that immigrants are less likely than the native-born to commit violent crimes or end up behind bars. The CIS report focuses much of its attention on questioning the accuracy of the 2000 Census data used in two particular studies, one from the Immigration Policy Center (IPC) and another from the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC)—both of which dispel the myth of immigrant criminality. However, CIS ignores not only the many other sources of data in these two studies, but also the myriad studies from other researchers which have reached the same conclusion.
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