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San Diego sheriff still enforcing immigration laws?

by: Brian Leubitz

Sun Oct 28, 2007 at 08:21:33 AM PDT


It would be odd, as that's you know, against the law.  However, we have multiple reports of the San Diego sheriff handing over "suspected illegal aliens" to border patrol agents. So, as it currently stands, several neighborhoods have checkpoints to enter, purportedly to prevent looting. However, if undocumented immigrants enter, the Sheriff intends to hand them over to Border Patrol agents.

Not only is this unwise and a poor use of resources, but it is also likely illegal. Over the flip, I've posted a press release from the ACLU with more details (h/t to NarcoSphere).  Concerned community leaders  are urged to communicate with Sheriff Kolender and Undersheriff Bill Gore at (858) 974-2250 or bill.Gore@sdsheriff.org.

Brian Leubitz :: San Diego sheriff still enforcing immigration laws?

According to the San Diego ACLU:

  • As evacuation orders are lifted on San Diego County communities, Sheriff Kolender plans to check i.d. of returning residents at checkpoints and continue his practice of detaining and handing over people suspected of being undocumented to U.S. Border Patrol.
  • Sheriff Kolender, who typically says the Sheriff's Department does not have the resources to do the federal government's job of immigration enforcement, has refused to drop his policy of nonetheless helping Border Patrol when identifying potentially undocumented persons despite the tremendous demands on the Sheriff's Department and the highly unusual practice of setting up military-style checkpoints outside people's neighborhoods.
  • Sheriff Kolender also dismissed advice that people who are undocumented will be afraid to return to family and residences in the area due to the Sheriff's checkpoints and policy of cooperating with Border Patrol.
  • "In a time of emergency, the Sheriff seems inclined to put immigration politics over basic human decency," said Kevin Keenan, executive Director of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. "It will be a shameful mark on an otherwise commendable performance during the County's historic wildfire tragedy."
  • The checkpoints may last between one and three days.  During this time Border Patrol and other agencies will be assisting the Sheriff's Department.  North (San Diego) County is home to a large population of farmworkers, landscapers, and domestic workers--many undocumented--who help harvest tomatoes and other crops and tend to the area's many wealthy residences.  It is expected that this same population will be relied upon to rebuild, clean up, and hastily harvest surviving crops.

  • "The Sheriff needs to prioritize helping people get home after this long ordeal," said Norma Chavez Peterson, executive director of Justice Overcoming Boundaries. "He will exacerbate the area's crisis by keeping residents displaced, rather than administering a safe and swift return."


According to the Immigrant Rights Consortium, who set up relief centers for immigrants at Qualcomm and the Del Mar Fairgrounds:

-"We have a humanitarian crisis that is escalating. Red Cross will no longer allow the NGOs that have been transporting goods to families in need who can't get to RC distribution sites or who are too scared to go to access relief supplies. They are requiring individuals to appear in person and identify themselves. This affects not only undocumented and mixed families, but also the poor and homeless who don't have transportation, including Native Americans on/near non-gaming tribal lands who are not being serviced and were greatly affected."

From Enrique Morones of Border Angels:

"This fire storm has brought out the best and sometimes the worst in people. There have been several cases of discrimination, intimidation and inequity in the relief efforts and we want to make it clear...that we are one community, and we want to be sure all the needs of the entire community are met. We will continue to reach out to those in need and demand that we will not tolerate discrimination or intimidation of any kind."

"While with KATRINA, many of our African American brethren were unfairly treated and characterized, now its us, the Latino community, that are often targeted" states Enrique Morones of Border Angels & Gente Unida.

Please be sure to join us as we will ask other community members and organizations to  join us,  we realize there  are many people involved in reaching out to our brethren and this is greatly appreciated. As Martin Luther King taught us "injustice here, is injustice everywhere"

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Typical conservatism (0.00 / 0)
Use a natural disaster to aggressively ramp up attacks on people of color and widen existing social inequalities. This is a disgusting practice and we should support the SD ACLU and other local activists in their fight against this practice.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

Illegal (0.00 / 0)
The example cited here is poor. 

The Sheriff came across a man in an area that was under mandatory evacuation orders walking along a deserted street.  Hence, that's why they approached the man.  As it happened, he was carrying a backpack with stolen property from a vacated home.  Instead of processing him, the Sheriff handed him over to the Border Patrol. 

I suspose they could have charged him with theft and took him downtown for processing.  But their mission of the day was more pressing.  The illegal was probably lucky.  If her were a US Citizen, he would have been in jail right now.


Pretty sure the person isn't "illegal" (5.50 / 2)
regardless of what he may have done.

"We need men who can dream of things that never were." -JFK

[ Parent ]
Reply (1.00 / 2)
Actually, I am glad they called BP!

We were at the Campo Community Shelter this week, and a group of 4 ILLEGAL ALIANS tried to take off with a TRUCK LOAD of donated items that were to be used by the PEOPLE IN NEED!  Hello, Again, Illegal Aliens!  Not US Citizens.....

If you want to come to ANY country do IT LEGALLY!  Or don't bother!

Ken
BTW: Enforcing the law has NOTHING to do with what country you are from, or the color of your skin, the LAW is colored blind!  Remember that please......


[ Parent ]
"colored blind" -- freudian slip? (0.00 / 0)
Anyway did it occur to you that the people who took them were "PEOPLE IN NEED" or that they might be taking them to others who were in need?

Come on, is there really a hot black market in cots and water? There's no way they were stealing that from "PEOPLE IN NEED" just to make money or whatever.

Seems the most likely scenario is that groups of undocumented immigrants who were also affected by the fires were (understandably!) fearful of going to shelters, so these guys picked up some supplies and were taking it to their makeshift alternative "shelter." I'm not going to argue that their methods were a little sketchy, you know, they could have tried asking first or whatever. But if they needed the stuff, well, that's what it's there for. And I say this as somebody who went to the grocery store and dropped a good-sized chunk of cash on some supplies that I dropped off at an evacuation center. I hope it was my stuff they took if they needed it!!


[ Parent ]
Just to clarify (0.00 / 0)
Could you or someone else clarify the rules that were in place surrounding these donated supplies?  Were they contributed with the expressed restriction that they could only be given to United States citizens or that they had to be used/consumed only on the premises of the evacuation center?  Also, were evacuees bound by any sort of verbal or written contract, pledge, or rule that the supplies were only for use while occupying an evacuation center?  What are the rules for people who took their half-bottle of water with them on the way back to Rancho Bernardo? Were they also looting?

"We need men who can dream of things that never were." -JFK

[ Parent ]
Looters (1.00 / 2)
What ever happened to shooting looters?

Oh jeez (8.00 / 1)
Looks like the nutjobs have found us.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

well... (1.00 / 2)
... I was kidding.  But, there was a time when looters were shot.  It just goes to show how far we've come.  Or gone.

As an aside, I support capital punishment.  I also wouldn't mind sending criminals to go survice for themselves on an island someplace far from civilized people.


Um (0.00 / 0)
I know of at least one instance last week in which a looter was shot.

"We need men who can dream of things that never were." -JFK

[ Parent ]
Yeah, jokes about killing (0.00 / 0)
very funny, especially when written as if a serious suggestion about a current situation, then retracted much later.  Ha. Ha. 

Says a lot about the person who makes that kind of "joke".  In particular, it says "this person is outside the bounds of acceptable discourse for Calitics."


[ Parent ]
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