Texarkana Gazette

ICE ups ante in standoff with NYC: ‘This is not a request’

- By Jim Mustian

NEW YORK — Federal authoritie­s are turning to a new tactic in the escalating conflict over New York City’s so-called sanctuary policies, issuing four “immigratio­n subpoenas” to the city for informatio­n about inmates wanted for deportatio­n.

“This is not a request — it’s a demand,” Henry Lucero, a senior U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t official, told The Associated Press. “This is a last resort for us. Dangerous criminals are being released every single day in New York.”

Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administra­tion said Saturday the city would review the subpoenas.

“New York City will not change the policies that have made us the safest big city in America,” spokeswoma­n Freddi Goldstein said in an email.

The developmen­t comes days after ICE sent similar subpoenas to the city of Denver, a move that reflected the agency’s mounting frustratio­n with jurisdicti­ons that do not honor deportatio­n “detainers” or provide any details about defendants going in and out of local custody.

The subpoenas sent to New York seek informatio­n about three inmates — including a man wanted for homicide in El Salvador — who were recently released despite immigratio­n officials requesting the city turn them over for deportatio­n.

The fourth subpoena asks for informatio­n about a Guyanese man charged this month with sexually assaulting and killing Maria Fuertas, a 92-year-old Queens woman.

That case became a flashpoint in the conflict after ICE officials said the city had released the woman’s alleged attacker, Reeaz Khan, 21, on earlier assault charges rather than turn him over for deportatio­n. Khan was charged with murder Jan. 10 and remains in custody.

New York City police say they didn’t receive a detainer request for Khan, though ICE insists it was sent. Either way, the city would not have turned him over under the terms of New York’s local ordinance governing how police work with immigratio­n officials.

Hours before the subpoenas were issued on Friday, the acting ICE director, Matthew Albence, told a news conference in Manhattan that city leaders had blood on their hands in Fuertas’ death.

“It is this city’s sanctuary policies that are the sole reason this criminal was allowed to roam the streets freely and end an innocent woman’s life,” Albence said.

Goldstein said in an email Saturday that “the Trump administra­tion’s attempt to exploit this tragedy are absolutely shameful.”

De Blasio has accused ICE of employing “scare tactics” and spreading lies.

He said on Twitter this week that the city has passed “common-sense laws about immigratio­n enforcemen­t that have driven crime to record lows.”

City officials in Denver said they would not comply with the requests, saying the subpoenas could be “viewed as an effort to intimidate officers into help enforcing civil immigratio­n law.”

“The documents appear to be a request for informatio­n related to alleged violations of civil immigratio­n law,” Chad Sublet, Senior Counsel to the Department of Safety in Denver, wrote in a letter to ICE officials.

But Lucero, ICE’s acting deputy executive associate director for enforcemen­t and removal operations, said the agency may consult with federal prosecutor­s to obtain a court order compelling the city’s compliance. “A judge can hold them in contempt,” he told The AP.

Meanwhile, ICE is considerin­g expanding its use of immigratio­n subpoenas in other sanctuary jurisdicti­ons.

“Like any law enforcemen­t agency, we are used to modifying our tactics as criminals shift their strategies,” Lucero said in a statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States