Border Enforcement

Migration at the border is a multifaceted issue, challenging the U.S. to secure our borders while upholding the human rights of individuals seeking safety and better opportunities. Balancing national security with compassion and our legal obligations to asylum seekers presents intricate dilemmas, and we collaborate with policymakers to advance bipartisan, action-oriented solutions.

Beyond A Border Solution

America needs durable solutions. These concrete measures can bring orderliness to our border and modernize our overwhelmed asylum system. Read…

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Arizona’s Sheriff Arpaio Puts Publicity Before Border Violence Hearing

Arizona’s Sheriff Arpaio Puts Publicity Before Border Violence Hearing

You'd think America's self-proclaimed "toughest sheriff," Joe Arpaio, would've been in his hometown of Phoenix, Arizona to attend yesterday's U.S. Senate hearing on border violence.  Instead, while a panel of U.S. Senators lead by John McCain traveled to Arizona, Sheriff Arpaio was well on his way to appear on Stephen Colbert's comedy show, The Colbert Report, taped in New York City. Arpaio is known for transforming Arizona's Maricopa County Police Department into an immigration-enforcement agency, taking the pursuit of undocumented immigrants to "unconstitutional extremes" and gaining international notoriety and a Department of Justice investigation in the process.  Yet, if all his extreme tactics are in the name of protecting his community, why did Arpaio miss a hearing on one of the biggest threats to Maricopa County's public safety hosted in his own town hall?  The truth is Arpaio's appetite for publicity is so insatiable that it overrides any sense of duty, rationality, or morality. Read More

California Ballot Initiative Seeks to Denigrate Immigrants’ Infants at Birth

California Ballot Initiative Seeks to Denigrate Immigrants’ Infants at Birth

This week Pew released a report revealing that approximately 4 million U.S. citizen children have least one parent who entered the country without authorization and nearly three quarters of all children born to undocumented parents are now U.S. citizens.  Anti-immigrant activists and former GOP state Senator Bill Morrow in California have already decided that, rather than treat these children as they would their own and invest in making them well-educated and acclimated adults, they'd rather launch a ballot initiative designed to make them second-class citizens. The North County Times reports: Read More

Human Rights Organizations Say Immigrants

Human Rights Organizations Say Immigrants “Caught in Detention Dragnet”

On any given day, more than 30,000 immigrants are detained in the U.S.  More than 300,000 men, women, and children are detained by U.S. immigration authorities each year.  ICE reported that the average stay in detention was 37 days; however many immigrants and asylum seekers are detained much longer – months or even years – until they are either deemed eligible to remain in the U.S. or are deported. International human rights organizations have turned their attention toward the detention and deportation of immigrants in the U.S.  Yesterday, Human Rights Watch released a new report, “Forced Apart (By the Numbers): Non-Citizens Deported Mostly for Nonviolent Offenses,” which found that three quarters of non-citizens deported from the United States over the last decade after serving criminal sentences were convicted of nonviolent offenses, such as minor drug possession and traffic offenses.  Furthermore, one in five of those deported had been in the country legally, sometimes for decades. Read More

Pew Report Backs the Case for Legalizing Undocumented Immigrants

Pew Report Backs the Case for Legalizing Undocumented Immigrants

Yesterday, the Pew Hispanic Center released new data on undocumented immigrants in the United States that highlights not only the absurdity of the "deport them all" approach adopted by many anti-immigrant activists, but also the social and economic benefits that would flow from a legalization program for the undocumented. According to Pew, there were 11.9 million undocumented immigrants in the country in 2008, including 1.5 million undocumented children. Moreover, there were another four million native-born, U.S.-citizen children with undocumented parents. Some of these U.S.-born children have already faced the nightmarish dilemma that all of them would face under a "deportation only" scenario: leave behind the country of their birth to stay with their parents, or try to find some way to stay in the United States without their parents. Read More

American Citizens Illegally Detained and Deported

American Citizens Illegally Detained and Deported

You probably can't imagine the horror and frustration of being detained in a jail cell just waiting to be deported—separated from your friends, family and your job—knowing full well you are an American citizen with every right to live in this country. According to a recent AP article, however, this gross injustice has been the reality for literally hundreds of US citizens. In a drive to crack down on illegal immigrants, the United States has locked up or thrown out dozens, probably many more, of its own citizens over the past eight years. A monthslong AP investigation has documented 55 such cases, on the basis of interviews, lawsuits and documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. These citizens are detained for anything from a day to five years. Immigration lawyers say there are actually hundreds of such cases. Read More

Utah Police Say “Local Agencies Can’t Solve the Immigration Problem”

Utah Police Say “Local Agencies Can’t Solve the Immigration Problem”

Salt Lake City's local NBC channel reports that many residents are up in arms about a new state immigration law (SB 81) that would allow police to question individuals' legal status, among other stringent requirements on everyone from employers to landlords. The Salt Lake Police Department's Chief Burbank has been opposed to the immigration bill from the beginning and, according to some sources, has said he will not participate in its enforcement. There have been growing national concerns about the involvement of local police in the enforcement of immigration law.  Sheriff Joe Arpaio is currently under investigation by the Department of Justice for civil rights infractions associated with his police department's partnership with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.  Burbank is justifiably cautious in his opposition to enforcing a law that he believes requires law enforcement to racially profile individuals to determine whether they are undocumented or not. Read More

Rev. Al Sharpton Demands Sheriff Arpaio’s Resignation

Rev. Al Sharpton Demands Sheriff Arpaio’s Resignation

In an act of solidarity with the immigrant community, National Action Network’s Reverend Al Sharpton and ACORN's Chief Organizer and CEO, Bertha Lewis called for Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s resignation and an end to racial profiling on a national media call today. Never one to miss the national spotlight, Sheriff Arpaio is currently the focus of a Department of Justice investigation for abuses of the 287(g) program, “alleged patterns of discriminatory police practices, and discrimination based on a person’s national origin.” Rev. Al Sharpton charged Sheriff Arpaio with egregious civil and human rights violations: I am calling for an end to the civil and human rights violations being committed in Maricopa County, the termination of the 287(g) program through which local agencies can enforce Federal immigration laws, and the immediate resignation of Sheriff Joe Arpaio. The egregious nature of Arpaio’s abuses, marking him as the Bull Connor of the 21st Century, demands nothing less. Read More

ICE Agent Sues ICE Agents for Storming His House

ICE Agent Sues ICE Agents for Storming His House

We've heard the stories about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents terrorizing immigrant families by kicking in doors in the middle of the night and separating mothers and fathers from their children.  However, in an ironic twist, Customs and Border Protection Officer Jim Slaughter is filing a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security after ICE agents showed up at his doorstep and demanded to search his home. According to Slaughter: "My wife said is this candid camera and that kind of ticked him off a little bit and he says no mam you need to step back... I said do you realize I'm a U.S. Customs K-9 officer at San Luis, Arizona and they all just froze. The lead agent, his eyes got real big, and he's like what?  You are?" Read More

Napolitano Navigates Border Problems in a Broken Immigration System

Napolitano Navigates Border Problems in a Broken Immigration System

Late last week, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano met with Mexican officials and announced yet another re-focus of her agency's objectives: hundreds of border patrol agents will be paying just as much attention to what goes into Mexico as to who comes out of it.  In other words: NAPOLITANO: ...from now on, when trucks come into this port, they are going to see something they haven't seen before, and that's southbound inspections. Agents haven't diverted their attention from stopping drugs and undocumented immigrants from entering the United States. Rather, hundreds of additional agents are being redeployed to stop the weapons and cash that flow into Mexico.  This new initiative comes just one week after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton admitted: Read More

House Hearing Shows 287(g) “Sets Police Profession Back to 1950’s

House Hearing Shows 287(g) “Sets Police Profession Back to 1950’s”

In response to evidence piling up suggesting that the 287(g) program is experiencing an array of problems, the House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law and the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties held a hearing today to learn more about the program's alarming effects. Members of the Subcommittees heard testimony from Julio Cesar Mora, a 19 year old native-born US citizen who told of how he and his father (who has had his green card since 1976) were stopped in their car on the way to work, patted down, handcuffed and taken to a place where many workers were being held by officers in black uniform and ski masks.  After several hours Julio and his father were released after proving their legal immigration status.  Mora said: Read More

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