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  1. #1
    Senior Member American-ized's Avatar
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    TX-Valley jails to screen all inmates for immigration violat

    Valley jails to screen all inmates for immigration violations

    The Monitor (McAllen, Texas)
    June 10, 2009 Wednesday
    By Jeremy Roebuck

    Jun. 10--RIO GRANDE CITY -- The Starr County Detention Center on Tuesday became the latest border jail to implement a federal program aimed at screening the immigration status of all of its inmates.

    By matching the fingerprints of all people booked into the local lockup against federal immigration databases, authorities hope to better identify those criminal aliens eligible for deportation after their release.

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials estimate the "Secure Communities" initiative could lead to a 15 to 25 percent increase in the number of illegal immigrants deported from the county jail each year.

    "It provides ICE with a virtual presence to look at all of these counties along the border and provide 100 percent enforcement," said Michael Pitts, director for detention and removal for the agency's San Antonio Field Office, whose jurisdiction includes the Rio Grande Valley.

    While computerized immigration checks are already run in federal and state prisons, local jails have until now lacked the resources to screen all inmates.

    Previously, U.S. Border Patrol agents would visit jails like those in Hidalgo and Starr counties every day to interview those detainees suspected of being in the country illegally.

    But because such a screening process relies on physical documents and biographical information provided by suspects, several criminal aliens likely slipped through the cracks, Starr County Sheriff's Capt. Romeo Ramirez Jr. said.

    Under the new program, computerized checks would occur automatically as part of the standard booking process. Fingerprints currently run through the U.S. Department of Justice's criminal history database will now also be matched against records the U.S. Department of Homeland Security keeps on civil immigration violations.

    When a hit occurs, the inmate's name will be sent to federal and local authorities and flagged for potential deportation. Those immigrants charged with violent crimes such as murder, kidnapping, assault or rape will move to the front of the line for eventual removal from the country, Pitts said.

    The process also removes the need for local agents to target inmates based on traditional red flags that suggest he or she may be an illegal immigrant, he said.

    "It doesn't put them in the position of profiling," said Pitts. "We're checking each and every person coming into the jail."

    The expansion of the Secure Communities program comes seven months after Texas Gov. Rick Perry blasted then President George W. Bush's Homeland Security Department for its screening efforts at the state's jails. At the time, Perry urged ICE to share its database with all Texas counties capable of analyzing fingerprints electronically.

    "To learn that criminal aliens who have been jailed are being released back into our communities by federal authorities who have neglected to secure our border is infuriating and unconscionable," Perry said in a sternly written letter to then Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff in November.

    Since taking office, President Barack Obama's administration has vowed to devote more resources to immigration enforcement against those who commit crimes after entering the country illegally than against those migrants who come solely to look for work.

    ICE identified 221,000 deportable inmates nationwide during the 2008 fiscal year, but officials estimate that number could reach 1.4 million once Secure Communities is launched in every local lockup nationwide -- a goal currently set for 2012.

    Four border counties in Texas have already launched the program in their jails, and officials hope to have the initiative up and running in Cameron, Willacy and Hidalgo counties by the end of the month.

    But Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Trevino -- who estimates he has more than 300 identified criminal aliens in his jail every day -- already sees other ways the technology could aid law enforcement.

    He has suggested ICE officials develop a mobile fingerprint reader that could be used to compare unidentified bodies against immigration records.

    "If they still have fingers, we can scan them and possibly identify them that way," he said.

    Ramirez, the captain at the Starr County Jail, just hopes he will see signs soon that the system is working the way it should be. After launching the program at his booking office Tuesday morning, jailers had yet to find their first hit by the end of the day.

    "We're still waiting for the first one," he said. "But I think it's just a matter of time."

    Jeremy Roebuck covers courts and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 683-4437.

    http://www6.lexisnexis.com/publisher/En ... 99&start=4

  2. #2
    ELE
    ELE is offline
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    Thank our ICE agents and Law Enforcement for their hard work

    ICE and Law Enforcement in our country that are doing their jobs to the best of their ability have my deepest respect, they have their hands more than full.

    Horray for Texas, all states must follow their lead, come on, of course the illegals legal staus in our country is paramout to their case. Protection of the American people depends on legal status information and action.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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