Immigration Matters

From Garden City to Washington D.C. — and back — check here for the latest updates on current immigration news on a local and national level. Whatever side of the border you’re on, immigration matters.


Nightmarish Detentions

Posted on : Jun 16, 2009 by Shajia Ahmad
Filed under Human Rights, ICE 

jailAn outstanding commentary follows on the hellish imprisonments faced by individuals in the ICE detention system. The following op-ed by Larry Cox, Amnesty USA’s executive director, appeared in Monday’s Telegram … but since we don’t actually publish syndicated columns online, the following excerpt links to a full version of the story elsewhere.

On any given night, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) warehouses more than 30,000 immigrants in prisons and jails—a number that has tripled in the past 12 years. Among them, surely, are immigrants who have committed deportable offenses or are undocumented—but the jailed also include large numbers of legal permanent residents, individuals seeking protection from political or religious persecution, survivors of torture and human trafficking, U.S. citizens mistakenly ensnared in immigration raids, and parents of U.S. citizen children.

… Lawmakers who fear anti-immigrant backlash might consider the secondary benefits to honoring our moral imperative: the average cost of detaining a migrant is $95 per person/per day, while alternatives to detention cost as little as $12 per person/per day and yield up to a 99 percent success rate, according to ICE, as measured by immigrants’ appearance in immigration courts for removal hearings.

Congress should also pass legislation to ensure due process for all within our borders, including the right to a prompt individualized hearing before an immigration judge. Currently, ICE field office directors have the power to decide whether to detain someone; yet to incarcerate an individual for months, or even years, before a court makes a judgment on the individual’s case is an absurd negation of our nation’s stated commitment to the rule of law. (Read the entire op-ed here.)

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One Person has left comments on this post

Jun 16, 2009 - 08:06:09
Danna Jones said:

You will be surprised to hear that I agree with you on this one! I am certain that immigration enforcement is subject to the same kind of unspoken “quota system” that all law enforcement denies exists. And the resulting quagmire in the court system creates chaos.

However, I reiterate as I have so many times before…if I had falsified my income on a loan application and subsequently been found out….I would be doing some large time somewhere myself, regardless of whose bad advice I listened to. Wrong is wrong, even if someone tells you to do it. There will always be those who will prey on the gullible. Theirs is a dark circle in Hell. But it does not exonerate the foolish.

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