The Boston Globe

Last sheriff ’s office in N.E. ends enforcemen­t agreement with ICE

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The Barnstable County Sheriff ’s Office in Massachuse­tts is ending an agreement with US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t that gave deputies the authority to enforce federal immigratio­n laws, civil rights attorneys said Wednesday.

The Barnstable department was the last sheriff 's office in New England with such an agreement, called a 287(g), according to Lawyers for Civil Rights and the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachuse­tts.

Lawyers for Civil Rights sued the sheriff 's office last February in an effort to end the agreement.

According to the complaint, such agreements allow “sheriffs’ offices to designate staff members for training and certificat­ion in federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t and give them the authority to interrogat­e any detained person who the officer believes may be an undocument­ed immigrant, serve and execute warrants for arrest or removal, and transport immigrants to ICE-approved detention facilities."

State law gives sheriffs no such powers, the suit said. Sheriffs oversee the county jails in Massachuse­tts.

The agreements do nothing but create fear in immigrant communitie­s and drain state resources, it said.

Lawyers for Civil Rights anticipate­s dropping the lawsuit, attorney Oren Sellstrom said.

New Barnstable Sheriff Donna Buckley, who made a pledge to end the agreement a central part of her campaign, was sworn in Wednesday.

She replaced James Cummings, who retired after 24 years on the job.

Barnstable County includes Cape Cod.

“This program has not proven to keep us safer and causes many living on Cape Cod to live in fear. That fear ends today,” Buckley, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Bristol and Plymouth counties had similar agreements, but both ended in 2021.

An e-mail seeking comment was left with a spokespers­on for ICE’s Boston field office.

The ACLU, which was not a party to the lawsuit, applauded the sheriff 's decision.

“Across the country, 287(g) agreements turn local police and sheriffs into de facto ICE agents,” executive director Carol Rose said. “The result is that even the most minor interactio­ns with local law enforcemen­t can lead to detention, deportatio­n, and family separation.”

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