ICE FOIA 10-2674.0007222-0007227

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Transcript of ICE FOIA 10-2674.0007222-0007227

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    Microsoft Outlook

    From: Greenberg, Randi L

    Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 5:55 PM

    To: Rocha, Richard A

    Subject: RE: bingo

    12/23/2010

    Hmmmmnope, not on board yet. The article below does state it will start next month

    Tentatively scheduled for June 1. Also interesting is that Mayor Newsomes offices contacted DHSIntergovernmental Affairs and asked if SF could opt-out. Strange that the article states Mayor Newsomehas no issues with the initiative.

    Randi Greenberg

    From: Rocha, Richard ASent: Monday, May 17, 2010 3:09 PMTo: Greenberg, Randi L

    Subject: FW: bingo

    Is San Fran on?

    I thought they werent yet

    Richard RochaDeputy Press SecretaryU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

    From: Dilanian, KenSent: Monday, May 17, 2010 3:02 PMTo: 'Rocha, Richard A'Subject: RE: bingo

    Hey, this says San Fran is onboard. Can you confirm that, please?

    The San Francisco Chronicle (California)

    May 7, 2010 FridayFINAL Edition

    Newsom OK with new policy on fingerprints;IMMIGRATIONBYLINE: Rachel Gordon and Demian Bulwa, Chronicle Staff Writers

    SECTION: Metro; Pg. C1

    LENGTH: 573 words

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    Mayor Gavin Newsom's administration expressed no reservations Thursday over a newnational fingerprinting program that critics say could undermine San Francisco's sanctuarycity policy.The federal Secure Communities program, which launched in 2008, is being phased innationwide. It effectively takes away the ability of local officials to decide which suspectsbooked into jail should be brought to the attention of the U.S. Immigration and CustomsEnforcement agency.Next month it will start in San Francisco . In the Bay Area, Alameda, Contra Costa, Solanoand Sonoma counties recently implemented the program, but report they've seen fewchanges."Sanctuary city policies were never meant to protect criminal behavior," said Newsomspokesman Tony Winnicker. "At the end of the day, federal officials should enforceimmigration laws. We report. We don't deport."Currently, the San Francisco County Sheriff's Department only reports felony suspectswhose immigration status can't be verified to ICE.Next month electronic fingerprints of suspects already sent to state justice departments forcriminal background checks automatically will be forwarded to federal immigrationauthorities.Jeff Adachi, San Francisco's elected public defender, said he is troubled by the prospectthat people booked for even minor offenses could be swept into the federal immigrationsystem."If we begin deporting everyone ... you run the risk of creating a situation that underminesour ... sense of treating people fairly and due process," Adachi said.The program's goal is to deport all those who are eligible. However, resources are limited,and priority will be given to violent and serious offenders, said Randi Greenberg, the chief ofoutreach for the Secure Communities program.That doesn't mean the reach won't be expanded later, said Supervisor David Campos, whoentered the United States illegally as a teen and later became a citizen."I don't know if anyone knows all the ramifications of this until it goes into full effect," hesaid.Secure Communities officials said Thursday that the program has been a boon for publicsafety while costing local law enforcement officers little in time and money and removing thepotential for allegations of racial profiling.

    From October to March, more than 1.9 million digital fingerprints were submitted to SecureCommunities. The prints, ICE officials said, were compared to a database containing morethan 100 million people who had past contact with immigration authorities.Some 212,000 matches were made, leading to 56,000 immigration arrests or holds. Theprogram is likely to lead to more deportations.In fiscal 2008, 114,415 people with past convictions were removed nationwide, and this yearauthorities are on a pace to deport more than 150,000 such people, records show.The program so far has made few waves in the Bay Area. Alameda County jail just joined theprogram on April 22.Sheriff's Lt. Jim Farr in Alameda County said he has seen few changes. On Thursday he had155 inmates with immigration holds, a number that he said had not changed significantly.The Sonoma County jail joined the program on March 2. That month, ICE said, the jailsubmitted 1,780 fingerprints, leading to 185 matches - including 14 who were either

    arrested, or convicted in the past, for a serious or violent crime.Immigration agents then arrested or put a hold on 68 people, and 29 have already beendeported.

    From: Dilanian, KenSent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:51 AMTo: 'Rocha, Richard A'Subject: RE: bingo

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    Looks like LA had extra motivation

    Los Angeles Times

    May 12, 2009 Tuesday

    Home Edition

    CALIFORNIA;Slain youth's family is suing Sheriff's Dept.;The suit alleges the agency was negligent in releasing thesuspect who allegedly killed Jamiel Shaw II.BYLINE: Victoria Kim

    SECTION: MAIN NEWS; Metro Desk; Part A; Pg. 3

    LENGTH: 565 words

    The family of slain high school football star Jamiel Shaw II is suing the Los Angeles CountySheriff's Department, alleging that the department was negligent in releasing Shaw'ssuspected killer from prison despite his illegal-immigrant status.The lawsuit, filed Friday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, names Sheriff Lee Baca as adefendant and alleges that he "knew or should have known that they were releasing aconvicted felon and illegal alien with an extensive history of gang violence into the LosAngeles community to perpetrate killings against African Americans."Shaw, 17, a running back who was recruited by Stanford and Rutgers universities, wasgunned down in March 2008. Prosecutors allege that Pedro Espinoza, a reputed member ofthe 18th Street gang who was in the United States illegally, killed Shaw. Espinoza, 19, hadbeen released from jail a day before the shooting, after serving time for an earlier offense.

    Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said he would not comment on the details of the lawsuitbecause the department had not received it."It's obvious this young man's death is a tragedy," he said. "We will do our part in telling thewhole story."Shaw's death led to the proposal of Jamiel's Law, a controversial ballot initiative that wouldhave allowed police to arrest illegal-immigrant gang members for being in the countryillegally.The petition failed to get enough signatures to qualify for the May ballot.The lawsuit also alleges wrongful death, civil rights violations and a violation of the U.S.Immigration and Nationality Act, which empowers local police agencies to enforceimmigration law."We think that [Shaw's death] could have been avoided, had they simply made use of theresources they had," said Wesley Profit, an attorney representing Shaw's family. "It's not asif [Espinoza] was new to the system. . . . He's been in the system since he was a juvenile."Some immigration law experts said the lawsuit was proposing an unprecedented legaltheory in arguing that a sheriff or warden could be held liable for releasing an illegalimmigrant who goes on to commit a violent crime.Immigration and criminal law attorney Peter Schey said he did not think that theImmigration and Nationality Act was intended to hold local agencies responsible forenforcing immigration law."That would be an enormous, complex and extremely onerous requirement to place on everypolice department," said Schey, who is also the executive director of the Center for HumanRights and Constitutional Law. "It would be virtually impossible to enforce."

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    Whitmore said at the time of Espinoza's release that the Sheriff's Department screened onlyinmates with prior criminal records or those who told deputies that they were foreign born.Espinoza slipped under the radar because he claimed to be born in the United States and onlyhad a juvenile record, according to Whitmore.Beginning in October of last year, partly due to Shaw's killing, the Sheriff's Departmentbegan screening all known gang members for immigration status, Whitmore said. In recentweeks, a new federal program known as " Secure Communities " began allowing sheriff'sofficials to search a larger immigration database to identify those who are illegally in thecountry, he said.Espinoza was ordered by a judge last June to stand trial in Shaw's slaying. He remains incustody.--

    From: Rocha, Richard A [Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:48 AMTo: Dilanian, KenSubject: RE: bingo

    They dont have agreements with ICE they might with the State ID bureaus.The police can arrest and fingerprint .. but so do the sheriffs one someones booked in.

    In some instances, police wont fingerprint and only the sheriffs office will if thats where detainees are held.

    Richard RochaDeputy Press SecretaryU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

    From: Dilanian, KenSent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:44 AMTo: 'Rocha, Richard A'Subject: RE: bingo

    Yes, but the PDs fingerprint when they arrest, dont they? Do they have agreements?

    From: Rocha, Richard A [ Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:43 AMTo: Subject: RE: bingo

    I would go first to the Illinois State ID bureau thats who the agreements are with.

    The counties (since they typically have the jails) are the ones who are finger printing in most instances.

    Does that help?

    Richard RochaDeputy Press SecretaryU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

    12/23/2010

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    From: Dilanian, KenSent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:38 AM

    To: 'Rocha, Richard A'Subject: RE: bingo

    Yeah. Hey, I just talked to the LA Sheriffs guy, and he said he thought most of the information is beingtransmitted upon arrest by the PDs. And he thought it was a city by city decision to participate. So should I beasking these questions of the Chicago and LA PDs, or the county jails? Who are the agreements with?

    From: Rocha, Richard A [mailto:[email protected]]Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:21 AMTo: Dilanian, KenSubject: RE: bingo

    That was quick!

    Richard RochaDeputy Press SecretaryU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

    From: Dilanian, KenSent: Monday, May 17, 2010 10:58 AMTo: 'Rocha, Richard A'

    Subject: bingo

    Passing buck on immigration cost teen's lifeCHICAGO TRIBUNE Tuesday, July 10, 2007Prosecutors allege that Mwenda Murithi was a leader in the Imperial Gangsters and on the evening of June 25 he gave theorder to shoot at a rival gang, killing 13-year-old Schanna Gayden, an innocent bys tander.Murithi, 26, was charged with first-degree murder along with the alleged gunman, Tony Serrano, 19.The question at trial will be whether there is p roof beyond a reasonable doubt that Murithi is guilty of that charge.The question I have, though, is why Murithi was in the country at all that night.U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement records show he emigrated from Kenya on a student visa at the end of 1999 tostudy civil engineering at the University of Wisconsin a t Platteville. That visa was valid as long as he continued his studies.When he dropped out of U.W.-Platteville before the 2002-03 school year began, he was no longer legally in the United States.ICE, which now operates under the umbrella of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, formally terminated Murithi's visaFeb. 12, 2003, said Carl Rusnok, central-region spokesman for the immigration agency.He became not just an uninvited guest in this country but a most unwelcome one: Chicago police records show Murithi wasarrested 27 times from June 2003 until his arrest in connection with Schanna's slaying on a Northwest Side school playground.The charges weren't horrible -- mostly possession of coca ine, possession of marijuana, obstruction of traffic, drinking alcoholon a public way and other offenses commonly associated with the career of drug-dealing gang-bangers. Police said four of thecharges were felonies; the Cook County state's attorney's office said Murithi had two misdemeanor convictions, one of whichresulted in 30 days in jail this spring.But still. It's disquieting that anyone with that kind of track record for trouble spent so little time behind bars. And it'soutrageous that Murithi was still in the United States June 25, more than four years after he became an illegal immigrant andbegan racking up arrests.There's a good debate about whether honest, hardworking immigrants should be allowed to stay if their only crime is related totheir immigration status. But there's no debate, at least in my mind, when it comes to criminal illegal immigrants.Murithi should have gone straight from jail this spring into federal detention and then back to Kenya."If he was charged and did time, how come ICE wasn't notified so they could detain him?" asked Brian Perryman, former head

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    of the Chicago office of what is now ICE. "Why wasn't he taken into custody after he served his sentence? And if ICE wasn'tnotified, why not? That's a big mistake."Not us! said the Chicago Police Department. "We don't ever ask about immigration status," said spokeswoman Monique Bond."We leave that up to the courts."Not us! said the Cook County state's attorney's office. "We don't check," said spokesman John Gorman. "That's for [ICE] to do.We're not involved."Not us! said ICE. "Law enforcement agencies can contact our Law Enforcement Support Center for timely and accurateinformation" 24 hours a day, Rusnok said. If "the person who is being inquired about is subject to removal, [ICE] can place a

    detainer with the Police Department ordering the department to hold the person ... to allow ICE officials to take the person intocustody and begin removal proceedings."ICE has employees who screen cases for immigration violations at the Criminal Courts Building, but they are on duty onlyduring business hours, Rusnok said. He said security regulations prevented him from saying how many agency employeesthere are to check the immigration status of all those charged or convicted of serious crimes in Cook County.Not enough, though, clearly. Schanna Gayden paid for this joint abdication of responsibility with her life.Next time the anti-violence protesters take to the streets, here's an extra chant for them to direct to the mayor, the state'sattorney and immigration officials:"Throw the bums out!"

    Ken DilanianNational Security CorrespondentLos Angeles Times/Chicago Tribune Washington Bureau1090 Vermont Avenue NW, Suite 200E, Washington, DC 20005

    12/23/2010

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