One Sheriff Shows America How To Deal With Illegal Immigration

Martin

Deceased
One Sheriff Shows America How To Deal With Illegal Immigration
By Matt Towery
Thursday, August 2, 2007

While politicians have hacked and sloughed their way through the issue of illegal immigration, one sheriff in Atlanta has taken matters into his own hands by doing what the law already allows law enforcement to do -- begin deportation proceedings against illegal aliens who are charged with crimes.

Cobb County is a large, upscale and well-run county just north of the city limits of Atlanta. Once known for a more radical conservative tone, the county is now thought of as a moderate-to-conservative area more interested in promoting economic growth and the arts than promoting political agendas. I say that because the actions of the county's sheriff, Neil Warren, and his chief deputy, Lynda Coker, reflect not some Maricopa County brand of "hang 'em high" justice, but rather a businesslike approach to dealing with the issue of illegal immigrants.

In essence Warren's team is doing the one thing that every law enforcement agency in America could and should be doing, taking advantage of the existing laws and programs that could have an immediate impact on illegal immigration throughout America.

Cobb County sheriff's deputies have been trained by federal immigration officials as to what to look for and how to examine documents in order to determine whether someone arrested and placed in their custody is a legal resident. There may well be other law enforcement organizations in the nation that have availed themselves of such training and are also determining the status of those in their system. The difference is that Sheriff Warren is taking the opportunity that federal law also provides. He and his department have started to initiate, on their own, deportation proceedings once a determination is made that an individual in their custody is in the United States illegally.

In the four weeks since the Georgia county began its new program, removal proceedings have commenced against 42 individuals who either committed crimes or were pending trial for a lesser offense. Those who commit serious felonies are held for trial first, with the issue of deportation to be dealt with after their case is concluded.

It's important to note that the county works with federal officials, and that federal immigration officials must review the case before it goes before a judge. In other words, this is not fly by night justice. It is, truly, businesslike.

Some in the Hispanic community have argued that this strict enforcement has created a "chilling effect" in their community, saying that it causes those who might be here illegally to avoid reporting crimes or testifying at trials. That's nonsense. The program that the Cobb sheriff's office has developed doesn't run status checks on witnesses or victims.

Every poll I've examined shows that, while some Americans might support some system of allowing illegal immigrants to earn their way into the country, a huge majority of Americans are adamant that current laws, at the very least, be enforced. Warren's critics will find themselves with few Americans, Democrat or Republican, who oppose his program.

Sheriff Warren is not alone in dealing with the illegal immigration crisis. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, jailers throughout the nation have identified some 20,000 illegal immigrants using cooperative agreements with federal enforcement officials. How many actually initiated deportation procedures is unknown. Regardless, that number is just a drop in the bucket.

The fact is that most sheriffs and police departments in America have not gone to the trouble of obtaining federal training, much less have they taken the additional step of initiating deportation proceedings against those who are illegally in the country -- which in and of itself is breaking the law -- and then violate the law while illegally here.

One reason we don't see a nationwide run on such tight enforcement is, big shock, Washington hasn't provided enough funding to educate every local law enforcement agency, nor has money been appropriated to handle the deluge of deportations that would occur should every sheriff or police chief decide to follow the lead of Warren and others who have implemented such aggressive programs.

Perhaps if Congress wanted to get back into the good graces of the American people with respect to this entire immigration issue, it could start by embracing the efforts of those like Sheriff Warren and join with the Bush administration in at least funding this effort to send "illegal illegals" back home. I know if I were running for re-election to the Senate or for president, I'd want my picture taken with Sheriff Neil Warren of Georgia. At least he's doing something about an issue that Americans want addressed.


http://www.townhall.com/Common/Print.aspx
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Hispanic leader leaves Cobb board over ordinances

Woot!

http://www.accessnorthga.com/news/hall/newfullstory.asp?ID=116152

Hispanic leader leaves Cobb board over ordinances
by The Associated Press

MARIETTA - The leader of one of Georgia's most high-profile Hispanic groups has quit a Cobb County initiative designed to reach out to the Hispanic community saying the county government has shown a ``consistent lack of open, honest and transparent dialogue.''

Jerry Gonzalez, head of the Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials, resigned from the Cobb Latino Initiative after the county commission passed an ordinance last week that limits the number of adults who can live in a house.

Gonzalez said he was angry that the advisory group met July 23, the day before the vote, and neither Olens nor Annette Kesting the two county commissioners present mentioned the pending vote.

He said they also failed to mention a proposed ordinance that would prohibit day laborers from gathering on public property or in parking lots to solicit work.

Both ordinances target the Latino community in Cobb, Gonzalez said.

``I will no longer serve in a faux advisory role to government officials intent on using the Cobb Latino Initiative as insulation from their apparent and real anti-immigrant policies,'' Gonzalez wrote in his resignation letter July 25.

County Commission Chairman Sam Olens responded that advocates for the Hispanic community are making the county's actions a ``racial'' issue by implying that new rules are targeted at Hispanics.

``It's not a Hispanic issue,'' Olens said of the ordinance. ``It's a people issue. We're going to cite a boarding house whether the people are white, black or Hispanic.''

Cobb has 68,830 Hispanic residents, about 10.5 percent of the county population, according to 2005 census estimates.

The initiative is a group of business, nonprofit and community leaders that meets monthly to discuss issues important to the Latino community in Cobb.

Gonzalez's resignation comes at a time when Cobb has started to enforce several initiatives that affect illegal immigrants.

In late June, Cobb's jail started to check the legal status of every foreign inmate and has been trained to start deportation proceedings against those here illegally.

In January, Cobb started to enforce a rule requiring contractors on county projects to run new hires through a federal database to make sure they are legal workers.

Gonzalez said adding the housing and day labor ordinances and the way they came about were the final straw for him.

``Here we have another ordinance that clearly impacts Latinos and we're learning about it the day it's being considered before the commission,'' he said. ``They were doing everything in their power to make sure the issue did not come up before they voted on it.''

Olens said he gave Gonzalez a heads-up about the housing ordinance on April 30. Olens tried to send the group a draft of the ordinance June 30, but the e-mail got stuck in a spam filter, according to an e-mail from the county's spokesman.


(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
 
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