New York Times Opposes Immigration Enforcement: This Is News?

By James Fulford

04/03/2010

The NYT reports breathlessly that programs to allow local police to enforce the immigration law (which the Times has always hated) are being attacked in a report from within the Department of Homeland Security:
Report Faults Training of Local Officers in Immigration Enforcement Program By Julia Preston Published: April 2, 2010

State and local police officers who enforce federal immigration laws are not adequately screened, trained or supervised, and the civil rights of the immigrants they deal with are not consistently protected, according to a report released Friday by the Department of Homeland Security inspector general.

The report by the department’s internal watchdog was a sweeping review of a program run by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Through agreements signed with about 60 county and state police forces, the program allows local officers to question immigrants about their legal status and detain them for deportation.

The inspector general’s report describes the program as haphazardly administered, with local agencies detaining and prosecuting immigrants with little oversight from federal agents and significant inconsistencies from place to place. [More]

But really, who cares? Who cares if there inconsistencies, for one thing? The whole point is to engage the local law American law enforcement community, (there are perhaps 700, 000 of them) to do something about illegal immigrants in their communities. Since they're in different towns and cities, with different cultures, they're supposed to be inconsistent.

< Previous

Next >


This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.