05-05-2011, 12:14 AM
kj wrote:
[quote=Grace62]
Now that you've deigned to join the conversation, I will say that I mostly agree. However, I don't think that I9 enforcement has been in place long enough to react with such sweeping conclusions, this is new policy. I still think that people are thinking of the Bush-era workplace raids, and that is not what I9 enforcement is. It's paperwork auditing.
Deportation under the Obama administration has focused on people convicted of serious crimes, and the number of those deportation is up sharply, which is something I think we should applaud.
I find this part interesting because what happens here is that when criminals are deported, they come right back. It's like catch and release. So by and large, the people who have been found to be here illegally and incarcerated serve out their prison terms here. How does the new plan address this kind of thing? kj.
Hrm. Actually, this really varies by state and by crime. Some convicted criminals who are out of status are deported immediately without serving jail or prison sentences; others serve their time and are then deported. There is a fair amount of flexibility (though there are guidelines in place) for who remains imprisoned and who gets sent home. More serious crimes, particularly aggravated felonies and drug crimes, more often land the felon in prison. Someone convicted of a minor offense, like shoplifting or petty larceny, more often will have their sentence suspended and be deported immediately.
The Secure Communities program does more than track cases through court, however; it actually screens people as they are detained by the police, and if they have a previous conviction (even if the sentence has been served, etc.) allows ICE to hold them for deportation. This is done because many state and local correctional facilities did/do not check the immigration status of their inmates; this is gradually changing with the expansion of 287(g) agreements.
For the record, the number of people previously convicted of aggravated felonies who re-enter the U.S. and are captured is statistically small (as a percentage of all deported immigrants), but not tiny. Precise numbers are hard to find, because technically speaking anyone who has been deported before and re-enters the country has committed a felony. However, it would be a big mistake to conflate most of these folks - who are generally economic migrants - with rapists and drug dealers.