Legislators focus on illegal immigrants
Officers' roles may be beefed up
Rep. Glenn Donnelson, R-North Ogden, sponsor of HB105, envisions officers who are able to apprehend illegal immigrants during routine traffic stops.
"It's not head hunting," Donnelson said. "It's just an aid for officers when they are doing their routine duty."
The bill, one of several this session addressing illegal immigration, directs the commissioner of the Department of Public Safety to enter into an agreement with the Department of Homeland Security to allow some law officers to perform certain federal immigration functions in "investigation, apprehension, or detention of aliens in the United States."
The bill has yet to receive a hearing, but it has already drawn the opposition of the state's attorney general. The Department of Public Safety has also raised questions about what the bill really means.
It doesn't specify what the wording of the state-federal agreement would be. Such "287(g)" agreements work in different ways, depending on a jurisdiction's needs, said Lori Haley, spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
"It allows ICE to focus on more complex investigations," Haley said. "It's a win-win for everyone. It helps us and it helps the local jurisdictions. It's a great thing for public safety."
However, Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff said that as the state's chief law enforcement officer he strongly opposes the bill, which he sees as a detriment to public safety.
"The bottom line is, we have a job to do here," Shurtleff said. "Every moment we spend hauling in an illegal immigrant pulls us away from doing other things to keep the streets safe."
Shurtleff added that undocumented immigrants could be less likely to report crimes if they perceive local officers as federal agents.
"I'm all for having the feds do their jobs," Shurtleff said. "We need to be doing our jobs, not theirs."
The Utah Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice also opposes the legislation, acting director Bob Yates said. The opposition largely comes over concerns it could hamper local investigations and questions about the logistics of adding to jail populations by detaining the illegal immigrants.
Donnelson doubted such an agreement would hurt local investigations, saying he wants the agreement to target criminal aliens.
"Right now the officers who stop these people have to turn them loose," Donnelson said. "Let's do something about it, and not frustrate our officers."



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