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Human Rights Members Protest Immigration Measure

By Amanda Fitzpatrick RALEIGH (WTVD) -- More than 100 members of the Southern Human Rights Organizer conference, organized in front of the Wake County Jail Saturday to protest against Wake County's 287-G program. Jaribu Hill came from Mississippi and says the program is unfair. "287-G is a measure put in place by law enforcement to chill and the measure to chill and curtail the movement of immigrant people," Hill said. The measure gives local authorities some ability to enforce federal immigration laws. Inside the Wake County jail, they are allowed to check the legal status of every inmate that comes through the doors, using the inmates' fingerprints. Rosa Saavedra, a Wake County activist says she met a pregnant woman whose family was destroyed because of the new bill. "I met a lady whose husband was taken away due to this 287-G," she said. "The police took him here, haul him away for a minor traffic violation." Some argue the program encourages racial profiling. They believe the police target Hispanics and take them to jail for minor traffic violations so they can fingerprint them to find their legal status --later deporting them out of the country. But Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison disagrees, in an earlier interview he says the 287-G program has kept criminals off the streets. "We've already caught people that were wanted in other states and other counties," he said. "So to me, when we get a criminal off the street, regardless of how we do it, if we're doing it legally, then it's a plus for us." Harrison says they've found more than 550 illegal immigrants at the jail since 287-G started in Wake County and with the new technology, that number could increase.

Checkpoint Monitoring Training

This training will give citizens the tools and skills they need to monitor traffic checkpoints in the Triangle for evidence of racial profiling. Location: 103…

Secure Communities: 287(g) with lipstick?

Orange County's reputation as a welcoming place for immigrants, documented or undocumented, may be dented by the sheriff department's participation in the federal "Secure Communities" program. At issue is whether Secure Communities significantly differs from the controversial federal 287(g) program. The Orange County Board of Commissioners last night asked Sheriff Lindy Pendergrass to explain the county's participation, beginning this month, in Secure Communities. The pilot federal project grants the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigation automatic access to the personal information of people arrested in Orange County. The Commission heard Pendergrass' report, but took no action. The program is intended to help federal authorities locate illegal immigrants who have also been charged with crimes unrelated to immigration, including traffic violations, Pendergrass said. "The system is simply that, when you fingerprint someone, it goes through the system, and we get a correct identification of the individual," Pendergrass said, referring to the DHS and FBI databases. "The system does go through the right side of Homeland Security, but we do not—and they do not tell us—if someone we have fingerprinted is someone who is an alien." Pendergrass insisted the program did not violate Orange County's 2007 resolution opposing participation in the federal 287(g) program, which marshals local law enforcement agencies to arrest and detain undocumented immigrants. "I never know if somebody is wanted by immigration, because they don't tell me, and we have no way of knowing," he said. "We're not like Alamance County, and other counties, where they enter into an agreement—and they hold in the jail illegal aliens." Instead, Pendergrass said, "If they call us and tell us, 'You have Joe Blow, and he's an alien,' that's their business, and we don't get involved. If he's there on charges, he has to have all his charges resolved in Orange before immigration can touch him. It's just a simple thing people have misunderstood." Orange County Attorney Geoff Gledhill said at the meeting that he did not think Pendergrass' participation in the program violates the county resolution, but noted that Secure Communities relates to "certain provisions of section 287(g)." However, the difference between the two programs is slim, said Marty Rosenbluth, staff attorney at the Southern Coalition for Justice. He told the Commissioners that Secure Communities "doesn't just violate the spirit and intent of this resolution, but it also violates the color of the law." "The effect of joining Secure Communities is to give ICE unfettered access to immigration information about members of the Orange County community," he wrote in a letter to the board. "Once ICE has matched the fingerprints of a detainee in Orange County jail, it is up to ICE, not the sheriff, to decide whether or not ICE will take action against the person," the letter went on. According to ICE, once a person is identified through the Secure Communities program, "[r]esponses may include such actions as: placing the alien immediately in ICE custody to avoid release; conducting personal interviews to gather additional information from the alien; placing detainers; and issuing charging documents." Immigration and Customs Enforcement is a division of the Department of Homeland Security. While Pendergrass distinguished Orange County's immigration program from 287(g) participating counties such as Alamance, Wake and Mecklenburg, he said that soon, all of North Carolina would be reporting fingerprinting data to federal immigration authorities. "By the end of the year, and maybe the first few months of 2010, the whole system in the state of North Carolina will be just like ours," he said. Matt Saldaña, msaldana (at) indyweek (dot) com

287g and Secure Communties

287g and Secure Communites are programs of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency that allows local police officers, like sheriffs' deputies and city police officers, to enforce federal immigration law by entering into agreements with the federal agency. As part of this program, federal and local agencies can enter into agreements, known as "MOU's", promoted as ways to remove dangerous felons from the country. However, most of the people deported under these agreements were arrested for driving without a license or other minor offenses. Currently there are 63 active 287(g) MOU's in 20 states. 39 of the MOU's are in southern states. * North Carolina has more 287(g) counties than any other state. * 70,000 people have been deported under this program since January 2006. * In North Carolina, from January through September 2008, of the approximately 3,000 people placed in removal proceedings as a result of this program, 56% were charged with motor vehicle offenses, including no operators' license and DWI. Resources: The Policies and Politics of Local Immigration Enforcement Laws by the NC ACLU and UNC-Chapel Hill School of Law 287(g) and other ICE ACCESS Programs in 2008 by SCSJ's Marty Rosenbluth

Investigating Human Trafficking in North Carolina's Farmworker Camps

SCSJ is collaborating with Student Action with Farmworkers to host a legal intern with their "Into the Fields" program this summer. The intern will train other SAF interns on markers for human trafficking so that they are able to recognize them in their work in the field. The legal intern will also create a resource guide for partner agencies to provide them with current information about resources available to address the problem. SAF has a tradition of creating culturally-relevant theater pieces during their summer programs that teach migrant workers about health issues, workplace safety, and their legal rights. Our legal intern will develop a popular education theater presentation on human trafficking that will be performed at farmworker camps. The goal is to make sure that farmworker communities are aware of this issue, can recognize it when it occurs, and know what steps to take to address it. Finally, the legal intern will be in a position to have a general legal liason role. When they encounter legal issues of any nature, or when other SAF interns do, our intern will be available to investigate potential remedies and obtain appropriate legal assistance for farmworkers.