Obama makes Deportation Priority by Mandating Secure Communities on States
WASHINGTON & SANTA
FE, NM (By Albor
Ruiz, NY Daily News)
August 11, 2011
President Obama has
ordered Secretary
Janet Napolitano,
Secretary of the
Homeland Security
Department, to turn
its back on state
and local
governments by
unilaterally
implementing the
discredited Secure
Communities
deportation program.
The decision to
ignore state and
local governments
and simply impose
the Obama
administration's
signature
enforcement program
was announced last
Friday by
Immigration and
Customs Enforcement
director John Morton
in a letter to 40
governors.
Morton said the
Homeland Security
Department is
terminating its
Memorandum of
Agreements with
state governments
that allowed them to
opt out of the
program.
States have no
choice but to comply
with Secure
Communities, he
said.
Immigrant advocacy
groups across the
United States
reacted quickly.
"ICE's decision to
now eradicate the
very agreements it
had worked so hard
to bully states into
accepting
demonstrates yet
again the agency's
lack of
accountability to
both the public and
the state
governments it
supposedly wants to
partner with," said
Michelle Fei,
co-director of the
Immigrant Defense
Project.
Secure Communities has contributed to the deportation of more than 1 million immigrants under President Obama's watch.
Advocates and
community
organizations are
calling for a
complete dismantling
of the controversial
program.
Last June, Gov.
Cuomo pulled New
York State from
Secure Communities.
Illinois Gov. Pat
Quinn and
Massachusetts Gov.
Deval Patrick also
took the same step.
Friday's
announcement
invalidates their
move.
Their reasons for
leaving were clear:
The program's
mission was supposed
to be the
deportation of
dangerous
undocumented
criminals, but in
reality it was
persecuting mostly
low-level offenders
or those never
convicted of any
crime.
By undermining the
community's trust in
local police, Secure
Communities was
undermining public
safety. The federal
program turns local
police into
immigration
enforcers.
ICE records obtained
through a Freedom of
Information Act
request reveal that
nearly 79% of
individuals deported
nationally through
the program from
October 2008 through
June 2010 had no
criminal record or
were arrested for
minor offenses.
"This decision of
the Obama
administration to
rescind all of the
agreements and deny
states the
opportunity to opt
out of Secure
Communities sends a
chilling message
that immigration
enforcement will
respect no
boundaries in its
dragnet approach to
detention and
deportation," said
Valeria Treves,
executive director
of the Jackson
Heights-based New
Immigrant Community
Empowerment.
By removing the
authority of states
to protect their own
residents, the
federal government
is "instilling fear
and insecurity in
immigrant
communities," Treves
added.
"The Department of
Homeland Security
should respect the
decision made by
Gov. Cuomo to keep
Secure Communities
out of our state,
and to protect the
rights of all New
Yorkers," said Udi
Ofer, advocacy
director of the New
York Civil Liberties
Union.
He said his group
and other civil
rights organizations
are considering
filing suit against
the Homeland
Security Department.
Of course, if
President Obama had
wanted it, things
would be different.
He has the executive
authority to change
the situation. But
despite the
President's words to
the contrary, Secure
Communities and
massive deportations
clearly are his
immigration policy.
As the American
Friends Service
Committee said,
Obama has granted
impunity to Janet
Napolitano,
Secretary of the
Homeland Security
Department, to
"devastate
communities,
separate families
and terrorize people
of color." With
friends like these,
who needs enemies.















