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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Town Council Pushes for Local Immigration Enforcement Traini

    http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/art ... 66&cat=104

    Town Council Pushes for Local Immigration Enforcement Training
    Immigration enforcement training request passes 6 - 1

    By Scott J. Krischke
    September 28, 2006

    The Herndon Town Council took the first step towards providing Herndon Police officers with immigration enforcement training on Tuesday night after voting 6 - 1 to request Immigration and Customs Enforcement [ICE] training.

    The request came after an often emotional public hearing that featured dozens of speakers both in support and opposed to the training, highlighting the polarization of a town that has been in the midst of a brutal debate on immigration since last summer.

    Town manager Steve Owen will now work with Herndon Chief of Police Toussaint Summers to draft a letter of interest requesting a relationship with ICE officials. The next step is forming a Memorandum of Understanding [MOU] between ICE and the Town of Herndon outlining the specific authorities that the police would have under the training.

    The Town of Herndon, if accepted for the training by ICE, will be one of the first town-level law enforcement agencies to engage in the immigration enforcement training. At the time of publication, ICE training agreements had been in place solely with state and county law enforcement agencies - many of them correctional institutions, according to ICE officials.

    While supporters have said that the training is necessary to combat the threat of gang violence and sexual crimes, opponents have underlined that associating local police with immigration enforcement officials would only further alienate the Hispanic community from the town.

    Opponents raised further concerns that an MOU could be drafted that would require officers to initiate deportation proceedings on anyone who comes in contact with police officers for as simple of an offense such as failing to stop at a stop sign. Herndon Police officials have denied that this would be an authority of the officers that is written in to the MOU.

    Any tentative agreement as to the authority of the trained officers that is formed between ICE and the town would first be publicized to residents and open to debate, said Vice Mayor Dennis Husch in his comments before voting to approve the request.

    "I can't imagine an MOU coming from [ICE] and," being quickly approved, Husch said. "The plan is to publish any future MOU and to speak with the community about this before anything is decided on."

    The sole dissenting voice on the decision, council member Harlon Reece, said that he was not satisfied with the amount of input that the council had received and believed the idea of "becoming the first town to initiate this training … requires more discussion." Reece was the only candidate elected last May to support the decision to establish a controversial day labor site in the summer of 2005.

    THE HERNDON POLICE Department had initially recommended the training to the Town Council during a council work session on Sept. 19.

    The recommendation came after a previous 2004 memorandum to Town Manager Steve Owen in which Herndon Police Chief Toussaint Summers had outlined some "potentially impacting issues" in accepting the training. Those issues included a potential negative impact on community policing, increased demands on personnel and added costs to the department.

    The decision to recommend the training was the direct result of learning more about what duties officers would be responsible for and changes that were made to the required number of participants to the program, Summers said. Some of the concerns about the impact of the program still remain, he added.

    "One of the community policing principles is trust, and whether this will result in some loss of trust in the community, I'm just not sure," he said. "We're here to enforce the law … but obviously you have to have some discretion when it comes to some laws, and this will be no different."

    If council members agree with the recommendation and a viable memorandum of understanding is produced between local law enforcement and ICE officials, Herndon would become one of the first town-level law enforcement agencies to undergo the training.

    The official recommendation came at the conclusion of a 90-minute community "focus session" on law enforcement on September 19.

    THE PROGRAM, referred to as 287(g) training after its section of the federal Immigration and Nationality Act, allows officers to begin deportation procedures of criminals who are found to be in the country illegally. It will most likely focus on a very specific type of criminal, said Amos.

    "What we're looking at is the violent criminal, the drug dealers, the gang members," he said. "We're certainly not looking to have someone who is pulled over on a routine traffic stop go through deportation procedures if they're not in this country legally."

    An exact number of recent cases that would fall under this category could not be acquired at the time of publication and police officials declined to estimate how many criminals the training could affect on a yearly basis.

    There are currently seven agencies nationwide with active 287(g) agreements, comprised of three state agencies and four county sheriff departments, according to Mike Gilhooly, spokesperson for ICE. There are about a dozen active requests for the training, he added, including some local town police departments. Gilhooly could not say whether ICE ever has denied an agency's request for training.

    While he would not discuss the Town of Herndon specifically, as it is a potential pending case, Gilhooly said that each memorandum of understanding that exists between law enforcement agencies and ICE lays out what authorities the trained local officers would have when it comes to beginning deportation procedures. Each ICE-trained officer would be supervised by an ICE official.

    The 287(g) training is "used in whatever performance duties that the agency decides," Gilhooly said. "In their normal course of duties they do not act as ICE officers, they are performing their duties — to these local organizations."

    PERFORMING THESE added duties might stretch the limits of the Herndon Police Department in its available number of officers on the streets if there is an excess of open cases, as paperwork in these cases often takes several hours, Amos said.

    "If you have a great deal of paperwork to do, as is the case with this authority — it can definitely have an effect," on the number of available officers at any given time, he said.

    It is for this reason, Amos added, that the Herndon Police Department also recommended that the Fairfax County Sheriff's Department be solicited for involvement in the program to assist local police in these procedures so that they can get back on the streets as soon as possible.

    The scope of authority that the Herndon Police Department would have under an agreement is still unclear and would need to be determined after meetings with ICE officials, Amos said.

    According to the focus session presentation given by the Herndon Police Department, the three operational models for 287(g) training focus on counter-terrorism measures and specific training for highway patrol officers, license issuing offices and correctional institutions.

    Herndon Mayor Steve DeBenedittis said that the training could be another resource for the community.

    "It's just another tool that our law enforcement can use that could help to remove violent criminals from our community," DeBenedittis said. "I think we owe it a shot to take a look and see what it can bring to the town."

    Council member Bill Tirrell said that one of the effects to the training would be in sending a message to all illegal immigrants living in Herndon.

    "I don't think that the police will go out hunting people who are in this country illegally," Tirrell said. "But my sense is that this will send the message to those who are in Herndon and in this country illegally that quite simply, they should go home."

    THE MAIN BENEFIT of the training would be in the fight against gangs said Aubrey Stokes, a Herndon resident and a member of Help Save Herndon, the grass roots organization that supported the candidates opposed to the day labor site in last May's election. Stokes and other members of Help Save Herndon drafted a proposal for council members to push for 287(g) and have been promoting the training among residents.

    "What it does is allow the police to have enough tools to deal with the culture, so to speak, of Herndon," Stokes said. "If you walk around Herndon you will see the effects that illegal immigration has had — you'll see the graffiti and the gang activity."

    "It's well documented that many [gang] members are illegal immigrants."

    Some of those who have been picked up for gang-related or violent charges have ended up being in the country illegally, Amos said. But the drive to initiate deportation proceedings from local officers under the proposed training will most likely relate exclusively to those types of offenders, he added.

    Despite Herndon's relatively small size of the law enforcement agency when compared with other 287(g) participant agencies, Stokes said that the training is still important in his eyes.

    "Successful law enforcement begins with the lowest common denominator and that begins at the local level," he said. "If Herndon is setting a precedent by being one of the first local law enforcement agencies to undergo this training, that's fine with me."

    "It wouldn't be the first time that Herndon has set a precedent."
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 00328.html

    Herndon Zeroing In On Illegal Immigrants
    Policies Could Affect Police, Businesses


    By Bill Turque
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Thursday, September 28, 2006; A01


    Herndon's decision Tuesday night to seek federal training for some of its police officers so they can enforce federal immigration law is part of a long-term effort by a new mayor and Town Council to aggressively curb the presence of residents who are in the country illegally.

    Two proposals on the draft agenda for next week's council session would intensify the town's scrutiny of private employers. One would require anyone seeking a business license to prove legal immigration status. The other would compel contractors doing business with the town to provide evidence that their employees live in the United States legally.

    The measures are likely to enlarge Herndon's role as a crucible in the national debate on immigration policy -- a position that town officials say they were forced into because of inaction by the federal government. The proposals also add fuel to charges from immigration advocates and some residents that Herndon, which has the largest proportion of foreign-born residents of any locality in the Washington area, has become implacably hostile to all immigrants, legal and illegal.

    Illegal immigration has been the dominant issue in town politics since summer 2005, when the council voted, after bitter debate, to open a publicly funded center to help workers connect with employers. Before the Herndon Official Workers Center was established, laborers had gathered each morning in a 7-Eleven parking lot to find jobs -- an arrangement that neighbors and officials said was chaotic and confusing. Opponents of the center said that by opening it, the town was abetting illegal immigration.

    In May, Herndon voters unseated Mayor Michael L. O'Reilly and two council members who supported the publicly funded facility and replaced them with challengers, including new Mayor Stephen J. DeBenedittis, who were highly critical of the idea.

    Vice Mayor Dennis D. Husch, one of two council members who voted against the labor center last year, said that the new proposals are still "notional" at this point but that the council intends to send a message that illegal immigrants are not welcome in Herndon.

    "These [proposals] may never see the light of day," Husch said. "But we need to do something."

    Business licenses have traditionally served as revenue-raising instruments, with governments charging owners a set percentage of projected gross sales. But in an advisory opinion this summer, Virginia Attorney General Robert F. McDonnell said local governments can withhold licenses from applicants who are not living legally in the United States.

    What the contracting measure would accomplish is less clear. Federal law already establishes penalties for employers who knowingly keep illegal workers on their payroll. Herndon's own standard contract language also forbids companies that employ the undocumented from working on major projects. Town Attorney Richard B. Kaufman said the council was interested in "beefing up" the language so that it applied to all contractors who provide services to the government.

    The council's 6 to 1 vote late Tuesday authorizes town officials to contact U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to express interest in enrolling some officers in the agency's "287 (g)" program, a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act.

    If the town is accepted into the program, it would negotiate an agreement covering the scope of the training officers would receive -- often in the areas of document identification and cross-cultural communication -- and what the law would empower them to do. In general, those who pass the five-week course are authorized to question or detain people they believe to be in the country illegally, according to ICE descriptions of the program.

    In a hearing preceding the vote, supporters of the program said it would take criminals off the streets.

    "You guys were elected because you said you would take action," Brenda Kelley, a 21-year resident of the town, told the council. "We all want safe, secure, happy, respectful neighborhoods."

    "Herndon has a chance to lend a helping hand to federal immigration agents," Stacey Brooks said.

    Jorge Rochac, a Salvadoran immigrant and former translator for the Herndon police department who ran unsuccessfully for a council seat this year, said adoption of the federal program "would tend to alienate the Hispanic community and makes them less apt to cooperate and trust the police."

    Former council member John DeNoyer was also critical. "Would I be profiled as a suspected terrorist or illegal alien because I have a beard and often turn brown toward the end of an outdoor summer?" he asked. "Please do not glorify and nurture the xenophobic hysteria that is affecting our town."
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