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Tag: Ohio ICE

  • Amid ICE Agent Abuse Arrests in Ohio, Advocate Says It ‘Fails to Police Its Own Ranks’ – Cleveland Scene

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    One Ohio-based Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer was convicted this year of abusing women and another was arrested on such charges. That has an advocate for immigrants calling on the agency to explain what it’s doing to screen agents as it seeks to rapidly grow its ranks.

    ICE didn’t respond when asked that question.

    President Donald Trump came into office promising to deport what he claimed were undocumented, violent criminals. 

    But NPR reported last week that more than a third of those arrested — about 74,000 — had no criminal records

    Of the rest, about half have pending charges and half have convictions. Most of the convictions are for low-level offenses such as traffic violations, the news organization reported. 

    As they’ve tried to conduct mass detentions and deportations, the conduct of ICE agents has been controversial. 

    They’ve been accused of violently arresting people, including some who are in the country legally. And CBS News reported that masked agents have used tactics during protests that violate federal policy and a court order.

    Lynn Tramonte, founder of the Ohio Immigrant Alliance, said ICE agents have been accused of violence against women closer to home.

    In March, a federal judge sentenced deportation agent Andrew Golobic to 12 years in prison. 

    A jury convicted him of “using his position to solicit and coerce sex from vulnerable women under his supervision” during his 14 years in the Blue Ash ICE office, federal prosecutors said.

    In October, NBC reported that in the agency’s rush to staff up, some agents have reported for training without being fully vetted.

    On Dec. 5, the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s office charged Samuel Saxon, 47, with assault, domestic violence and strangulation of his partner, WVXU reported. 

    In the 18 months that the ICE agent has been based in Cincinnati, police have been dispatched to his house during disputes 23 times, prosecutors said.

    In one incident, Saxon’s partner’s pelvis was fractured, although no charges were filed, they said.

    Tramonte said it’s disturbing that a federal agency would put such people in positions of power over others.

    “There’s a real problem with gender-based violence by ICE agents, and the agency is not taking it seriously,” Tramonte said last week in a written statement. 

    “Andrew Golobic used his position of power against women who feared deportation to extort sex. The police have been called to Samuel Saxon’s home 22 times… Anyone familiar with the pattern of domestic violence knows strangulation is part of a pattern of escalating behavior that often ends in murder.” 

    Saxon’s attorney told WXIX that his client had been suspended from his job.

    Tramonte said ICE needs to explain internal procedures that allowed Saxon to keep his job after having so many brushes with the law.

    “This is an agency that demonizes immigrants who have committed no crimes, yet it fails to police its own ranks,” she said. 

    “The hypocrisy is breathtaking, and the threat to public safety is clear. We want answers from the Detroit ICE Field Office and Cincinnati Local Office: Do ICE agents have to inform their employer when they come under scrutiny by other law enforcement agencies? If no, why not?”

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

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    Marty Schladen, The Ohio Capital Journal

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  • ACLU Says Ohio ICE Detentions Are Illegal, Demands the Release of Hundreds

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    ICE

    An ICE officer in an udated photo

    In light of an opinion issued Tuesday by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, the American Civil Liberties Union said that eight Ohio counties don’t have legal contracts with U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement. That being the case, the ACLU of Ohio said, those detainees must be released.

    However, one Ohio sheriff’s office said its contract with the feds meets the legal standards Yost laid out. Another said he’ll fix any problems, but he’s not releasing anybody.

    For its part, Yost’s office declined to answer questions.

    After taking office in January, President Donald Trump swiftly began implementing his policy of mass deportation. It was sold on promises that he would throw out violent criminals, but only 7% of those deported have been convicted of violent crimes.

    Meanwhile, stories are accumulating of dodgy cases against beloved asylum seekers. Claims of human rights abuses are mounting. And some economists predict that removing so many from the workforce will make already-high inflation even worse.

    Once a strong issue for Trump, by mid-July, just 35% of Americans approved of his handling of immigration, according to a Gallup Poll.

    But regardless of the issue’s popularity, Ohio sheriffs have an incentive to take in ICE detainees. They get $125 per-person, per-day, while the feds cover most of their non-food expenses. That revenue has helped fill gaps in their budgets, one Ohio sheriff said.

    In an opinion published Tuesday, Yost seemed to raise doubts about the legality of at least some of the arrangements. In response to a query from the Butler County Prosecutor’s Office, the attorney general said county jails could hold ICE detainees longer than 48 hours, and they could provide services such as transport — but only under contracts between the feds and the county commissioners.

    “The board of county commissioners may enter into an agreement with federal immigration authorities, on behalf of the sheriff, to detain aliens subject to removal in the county jail,” the opinion said. “The sheriff, however, does not have independent contracting authority for this purpose.” 

    At least two of the eight Ohio counties contracting to hold ICE detainees — Butler and Mahoning — are doing so after modifying contracts to hold prisoners on behalf of the U.S. Marshals Service. The ACLU of Ohio on Wednesday said that wasn’t sufficient.

    “Attorney General Yost has made abundantly clear that all county agreements with ICE must be authorized by the board of county commissioners,” Freda Levenson, the group’s legal director, said in a written statement. “County sheriffs cannot bootstrap themselves into having this authority. Striking these agreements means there is no legal authority to hold the immigrants currently incarcerated in our county jails. The people detained under these invalid agreements are being held unconstitutionally and must be released immediately.” 

    The attorney general’s office was asked if the ACLU was correct in saying that Yost’s ruling meant that hundreds of detainees were being held in Ohio illegally. It declined to answer.

    “Your question is different than the specific question asked by the Butler County Prosecuting Attorney and we offer no answer in response — our office does not issue legal opinions or guidance to nonclients,” Steven Irwin, a spokesman, said in an email. “The opinion issued to the Butler County Prosecuting Attorney addressed a specific, narrow question on a positive power of government. We have nothing more to say at this time.”

    The ACLU said eight county sheriffs offices had improper ICE agreements: Those in Butler, Fairfield, Fayette, Geauga, Lake, Portage, Mahoning and Seneca counties.

    However, Butler County Chief Sheriff’s Deputy Anthony E. Dwyer on Thursday said county commissioners there had signed off on his department’s arrangement with the feds. He sent along the commissioners’ resolution approving the modification of a contract to take in prisoners of the Marshals Service to also allow the jail to take ICE detainees. 

    “We got that agreement signed off on by the county commissioners,” Dwyer said in an interview. “The ACLU is a little mistaken about what they’re saying about Butler County.”

    He added, “People have regularly come to commissioners meetings and talked about it, so it’s shocking that they’re that far behind that they don’t know that.”

    Butler County housed 303 ICE detainees on Thursday. Mahoning County Jail in Northeast Ohio houses around 100 on a normal day. 

    Sheriff Jerry Greene was asked whether Yost’s opinion affected the legality of their detention.

    “The answer is I don’t know at this point,” he said in an interview Thursday. “I’m not sure if the commissioners would be considered as officially parties to the contract. When we put it together, they were definitely in the know and we informed them every step of the way.”

    As for the ACLU’s call to release the detainees, Greene was adamant.

    “The answer is absolutely not,” he said. “I am doing this to support the federal government. We have housed federal inmates for years. We’re definitely going to make sure we’re constitutional and following the law… but I’m not releasing anybody. We’ll remedy it as soon as possible.”

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

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    Marty Schladen, The Ohio Capital Journal

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