I keep seeing videos and reading stories about ICE abusing United
States Citizens. If you follow me on social media, you will know that I keep
asking the question of why these ICE agents are not being arrested for assault.
I thought that assault was assault, no matter who commits it, and that no one
person is above the law. Where are our police who took an oath to protect the
people and the Constitution? Why aren’t
the police out there protecting our right to protest? The Constitution
guarantees our right to protest, which they took an oath to defend. Why are
they not defending that? I read a story about how ICE raided a Chicago apartment building. They had
two vans, and they put all the Blacks in one van and all of the Hispanics in
another. It doesn’t appear they had warrants, and it does appear that many were
United States citizens. Why are the police and the local governments putting up
with this type of Gestapo-type abuse?
I asked the question, “Does our police have a legal and
ethical responsibility to protect legal immigrants and US citizens from abuses by
ICE. The answer I got is that, legally, local police are not obligated to
intervene in federal immigration enforcement, from abuses, but ethically and
constitutionally, they may bear responsibility to protect individuals, citizens,
and legal immigrants alike from abuses, especially if civil rights are violated.
ICE is a federal agency under the Department of Homeland Security. Local police
are not required to assist ICE unless the local law enforcement has entered into
a formal agreement with the Department of Homeland Security. If they have an
agreement, the local officers are deputized and can perform certain immigration
enforcement duties. Many sanctuary cities have adopted policies that limit the
cooperation between ICE and local law enforcement. This helps us hold the trust
between the community and the police.
Civil Rights protections are guaranteed under the
Constitution. People are guaranteed under the Constitution equal protection
under the law. If ICE violates these rights, such as unlawful detention, racial
profiling, or excessive force, local police may have a duty to intervene or
report misconduct, especially if they witness it directly. What I don’t like is
that the word may, as in “may have a duty”. They have taken an oath to the Constitution
and to the community, and I don’t think there should be any question about what
their responsibilities are. Their responsibilities should rest firmly with the
community and the Constitution. Ethically, I think that police departments are
expected to protect all residents from harm, including harm from other law enforcement
agencies like ICE. This includes legal immigrants and citizens who are subject
to unlawful or abusive treatment by ICE. When local police actively work with
ICE in ways that violate civil liberties, such as detaining people without probable
cause or ignoring due process, they risk becoming accomplices in the potential abuses.
An alliance with ICE and local law enforcement can erode community trust,
discourage crime reporting, and undermine public safety. Ethical policing
requires balancing enforcement with protection and civil rights, and community
relationships.
There are constitutional and legal foundations for the
police not cooperating with ICE. With the Tenth Amendment and Anti-Commandeering
Doctrine, local governments are not obligated to enforce federal immigration laws.
New York v. United States (1992) says that States cannot be forced to implement
federal regulatory programs. Printz v. United States (1997) says local law enforcement
cannot be compelled to carry out federal mandates. The doctrine reinforces sanctuary
policies, allowing cities to limit cooperation with ICE without violating
federal law. We also have Due Process and Equal Protection that are guaranteed
by the 14th Amendment. Legal immigrants and citizens are protected from arbitrary
detention, racial profiling, and denial of legal counsel. If ICE violates these
rights, local police may have a duty to intervene or refuse to cooperate. Here
again, I see the word may; I think they should be obligated to
intervene. Local agencies that cooperate with ICE do so voluntarily and often
at their own expense because you know the federal government will be really
stingy in compensating the local governments. Ending cooperation is legally permissible
and can easily be done by the local government through ordinances,
administrative rules, or agency protocols.
Local police are not federal agents. They are guardians of our
Constitutional rights. When ICE violates those rights, our police have a duty, not
just to the law, but to the people – to stand and say: not here, not in our city.
The Constitution does not deputize our law enforcement to be immigration officers.
It deputizes them to protect the public, including legal immigrants and
citizens, from unlawful government overreach. When an immigrant becomes a
citizen, they are no longer an immigrant, so legal immigrants are just that, Immigrants
that are here legally and have the right to be protected just like everyone
else under the law.
We have let the Trump administration undermine our Constitution
by letting him label everyone a criminal, whether a warrant has been issued,
and there has been no due process that is guaranteed by the Constitution. To me,
I think those acts of denial are a criminal act, and there needs to be consequences
under the law, or else the law means nothing. We have to start examining the
role of the police and decide if our money is being spent wisely, as it is
being spent now.
Comments
Post a Comment