Jul 2, 2007 9:00 pm US/Mountain

Colo. State Patrol Begins Enforcing Immigration

Terry Jessup
Reporting

(CBS4) DENVER The Colorado State Patrol has begun enforcing immigration laws.

A special unit of 22 members has finished a five-week training program and started their new duties. The patrol's Immigration Enforcement Unit is the first of its kind in Colorado and now has the authority to process and detain suspected illegal immigrants. Previously, only U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, known as ICE, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation had the power to do that.

The state patrol said they will use their expanded authority mostly to target criminals who use the state's highways for drug-smuggling and human trafficking.

"Merely the fact that someone may be undocumented and in the country illegally is not going to trigger us to take them into custody alone," Sergeant John Oliver with state patrol said. "Our main focus is smuggling and trafficking of our criminal aliens, the real bad guys we really want to make sure we remove from the country."

But not everyone's comfortable with what immigrant rights' groups see as the federalization of local law enforcement.

"We had a gentleman in Alamosa last week pulled over who was a U.S. citizen and he was pulled over because of the color of his skin," Julien Ross with the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition said. "And because he couldn't prove he was a U.S. citizen in that instance, he was taken to the immigration office where he later was released because he was a U.S. Citizen. This is that type of profiling and discrimination that we fear will occur now with the state patrol policies."

The patrol responds that racial profiling is illegal and will not be tolerated. They said they will still be focusing primarily on traffic violations and not driving around looking for loads of Hispanics to pull over.

There are similar units in 17 other states. The officers in the new unit have each taken five training exams and been a member of the state patrol at least two years.

http://cbs4denver.com/local/local_story_183230319.html