Increase in Latino federal prison population reveals flaws in immigration policy

By Justin Akers Chacon, February 25, 2009

Our immigration laws are out of whack. And they are clogging our federal prisons with nonviolent folks who are guilty of nothing more than living, working and raising families here without proper documentation.

A Pew Hispanic Center study released in mid-February documents how Latinos now make up 40 percent of the estimated 200,000 prisoners in federal penitentiaries, triple their share of the total U.S. adult population and disproportionate to their representation in state and local jails (19 percent and 16 percent, respectively).

Nearly half of the Latino population in federal prisons are immigrants, with 81 percent sentenced for entering or residing in the nation without authorization.

We are now incarcerating tens of thousands of immigrants without criminal records or fugitive status. They don’t pose a threat to the community, and they shouldn’t be behind bars.

But they are languishing there because of a policy shift by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which is increasingly targeting immigrants.

According to its Web site, ICE “protects national security and upholds public safety by targeting criminal networks and terrorist organizations that seek to exploit vulnerabilities in our immigration system, in our financial networks, along our border, at federal facilities and elsewhere in order to do harm to the United States.”

But there is no evidence that the vast majority of these immigrant prisoners have any intention whatsoever of doing harm to the United States.

They want to make a living.

They want to be with their families.

They want their children to have a better life than they themselves have had.

Our immigration service foolishly changed its policy to place these nonviolent immigrants on the same level as hardened criminals back in 2006. The agency eliminated a clause stating that three-quarters of those apprehended had to be criminals, allowing for non-fugitive “ordinary status violators” to be factored into their count.

Another counterproductive policy was “Operation Streamline,” which began in January 2008, with agents arresting and charging every person caught trying to cross the border. Before this, most Mexican nationals caught at the border were fingerprinted and returned to Mexico without criminal charges. According to the Washington Post, the number of criminal immigration cases filed by U.S. prosecutors nearly doubled in the first month of the program, accounting for “the majority of new Justice Department prosecutions nationwide in February — about 7,250 out of 13,500 — outnumbering all white-collar, civil rights, environmental and other criminal cases combined.”

Immigration officials also began mandatory jail sentences for immigrants using false working documents, a standard practice in the vast underground labor market. They are being prosecuted under the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004, which was intended to break up organized theft rings and credit card scam artists.

According to a Syracuse University study, criminal prosecutions for immigration violations overall have ballooned as the federal government goes after undocumented migrant workers. The total of 11,454 immigration prosecutions in September 2008 alone represents an increase of more than 700 percent from September 2001, the study says.

This astronomical increase shows that our immigration policies have not only degenerated from their original intent, but are now spinning out of control and wrecking countless lives in the process.

Now, more than ever, a new legalization bill is needed to resolve the immigration issue, so that law enforcement can concentrate on more pressing issues.

Justin Akers Chacon is a professor of U.S. History and Chicano Studies in San Diego. He can be reached at pmproj [at] progressive [dot] org.

Comments

Well, I must say that everyone here talks about solutions to the one element of infrastructure deterioration that can actually be corrected - the destruction of the American job market by the hiring of people who have no right being here, but offer no direct assistance. My family is 9 generations strong within the United States borders. I am proud to say that each and everyone of them willingly pledged their allegiance to this country, died to defend that allegiance, and produced prodigny to carry on that pledge, all legally. People who have to sneak into this country offer no allegiance to this country, will not defend it, and only produce prodigny to ensure that they will never be sent back to their home country. They destroy the United States economy by being willing to work for pennies, and then send what they do get to another country, thereby taking money to keep the economy flowing.
There is a saying that fits "History repeats itself." Back in the 1930's, it was mandated for all illegal aliens (over 600 thousand) be removed forcebly and sent back to their home country. This freed up jobs for the poor and hungry legal citizens of the United States, aided in rebuilding AFTER the crash of '29. The reason for illegals being in our country today is that Americans are too full of themselves. They think they are too good to bend down and pick strawberries, too good to sling a mop 8 hours a day, too good to say yes ma'am and no sir. American citizens need to get off their high horses and get back to brass tacks. Americans need to give support to the federal government in their efforts to rid our country of illegals, instead of giving illegals all the rights our ancestors fought and died for simply because they are human beings. They want our rights - let them become citizens.

Submitted by Nine generation... on Sun, 03/15/2009 - 11:51am.

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