The Supreme Judicial Court ruled today that a man who had a criminal charge dismissed should not have been then locked up to await federal officials who wanted him deported.
In its ruling, the court rejected federal arguments that local law enforcement should be at the beck and call of ICE, saying that such "detainer" requests are civil, not criminal issues, that Massachusetts law simply doesn't let police and the courts lock people up on civil infractions, and that the court will be damned if it gives the feds the right to order Massachusetts police and courts to lock somebody up on a civil matter.
The case involves a man arrested in Boston who had a criminal charge dismissed on Feb. 6 but who was not allowed to walk out of Boston Municipal Court - he was instead ordered held in a courthouse lockup to await ICE agents who wanted to deport him. ICE had asked Boston Police to hold Sreynuon Lunn for them when he'd been arrested last October on a charge of unarmed robbery - later reduced to a lesser charge of larceny.
According to the Suffolk County District Attorney's office:
That defendant had been charged in the Boston Municipal Court on one count of larceny from a person for allegedly taking a quantity of cash from a homeless man during an Oct. 22, 2016, incident on Canal Street. Because the victim did not appear for the Jan. 17 trial date, the case was rescheduled. A new trial date of Feb. 6 was scheduled. The victim did not appear on that date, either, and without his testimony, prosecutors could not proceed to trial.
Once Lunn's case had been dismissed, he should have been released, the state's highest court said, adding that forcing him to sit in a locked cell for several hours constituted an illegal "arrest" because he was no longer being held to face a criminal charge.
Conspicuously absent from our common law is any authority (in the absence of a statute) for police officers to arrest generally for civil matters, let alone authority to arrest specifically for Federal civil immigration matters.
Written Massachusetts statutes don't help the federal case, either, the court wrote.
[N]o party or amicus has identified a single Massachusetts statute that authorizes a Massachusetts police officer or court officer, directly or indirectly, to arrest in the circumstances here, based on a Federal civil immigration detainer. Simply put, there is no such statute in Massachusetts.
Yes, the court continued, there are cases in which people can be detained without a criminal charge, but those involve people at risk of harming themselves or others, not people sought by ICE.
[T]he common law and the statutes of this Commonwealth are what establish and limit the power of Massachusetts officers to arrest. There is no history of "implicit" or "inherent" arrest authority having been recognized in Massachusetts that is greater than what is recognized by our common law and the enactments of our Legislature. Where neither our common law nor any of our statutes recognizes the power to arrest for Federal civil immigration offenses, we should be chary about reading our law's silence as a basis for affirmatively recognizing a new power to arrest -- without the protections afforded to other arrestees under Massachusetts law -- under the amorphous rubric of "implicit" or "inherent" authority. Recognizing a new common-law power to effect a Federal civil immigration arrest would also create an anomaly in our common law: a State or local police officer in Massachusetts (or, as in this case, a court officer) would be able to effect a warrantless arrest for a criminal misdemeanor only if it involves a breach of the peace ... but would be able to arrest for a Federal civil matter without any such limitation; in other words, the officer would have greater authority to arrest for a Federal civil matter than for a State criminal offense.
The prudent course is not for this court to create, and attempt to define, some new authority for court officers to arrest that heretofore has been unrecognized and undefined. The better course is for us to defer to the Legislature to establish and carefully define that authority if the Legislature wishes that to be the law of this Commonwealth.
The court also cited the Tenth Amendment, which is often cited in state's rights cases:
The United States, in its brief as amicus curiae, concedes that compliance by State authorities with immigration detainers is voluntary, not mandatory. The government's concession is well founded for at least two reasons. First, the act nowhere purports to authorize Federal authorities to require State or local officials to detain anyone. ... Second, the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits the Federal government from compelling States to employ their resources to administer and enforce Federal programs. ... In other words, even if the Federal government wanted to make State compliance with immigration detainers mandatory, the Tenth Amendment likely would prevent it from doing so. The Federal government has also made the same concession in litigation elsewhere, and in various policy statements and correspondence, that State compliance with its detainers is voluntary.
Amicus briefs in the case - Scroll down a bit for arguments by the federal government and others.
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Comments
Thats fine
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:16am
ICE is hiring 10,000 new agents, many of whom will directly target "sanctuary cities."
The law matters in Massachusetts
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:40am
It doesn't in an authoritarian society,
Which is stupid, but legal
By BostonDog
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:14pm
If ICE (and the Trump/GOP) wants to waste tax payer money going after people who are doing nothing wrong, they legally have that option. But local and state employees have far better things to do.
Imagine how many more serious crimes could be solved if the feds gave officer funding to Boston PD and community groups not waste it on ICE fear-mongering.
Doing nothing wrong?
By Waquiot
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:43pm
The guy was in the country illegally. If the federal government wants to enforce federal immigration law, so be it. But lets not pretend that those who they are going after have done nothing wrong.
People who are in this country illegally
By mplo
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:47pm
People who are in this country illegally should be given the chances and the tools with which to be come legal citizens here in the United States, then.
They have the tools
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:22pm
They choose to circumvent the process and those following it the minute the overstay or decide to sneak in.
What you're advocating for is an open boarder policy, if you make it here and do xyz you can stay.
Not really
By anon²
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:44pm
1964 immigration act was put in place to keep people out, not to give them a fair and reasonable path to citizenship.
Plus these are civil crime. The fed don't go after, nor ask local police, to go after late library books or people spitting on sidewalks.
It's a waste of resources when so many other serious issues need to be tackled. Like the increased gun violence in the city being caused by legal citizens partaking in government sanctioned black market drug dealing.
Actually, they don't. Poor
By R Hookup
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 4:57pm
Actually, they don't. Poor unskilled workers from Mexico & Central America have almost no path to enter the US legally without relatives who are citizens (and that wait can be very long).
So, desperate people are willing to come illegally since the legal paths are closed (and the demand for their services is often already in place here).
Given that many (if not most)
By bgl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:52pm
Given that many (if not most) people here entered legally and overstayed their Visa, that would be a civil infraction (like a parking ticket), which is not a crime and not punishable by criminal penalties.
Well seeing that it's being
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:23pm
Abused in such a widespread fashion, maybe it needs to be made criminal.
Yes, and the court sort of addresses that
By adamg
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:33pm
After discussing in great detail why locking this guy up after his case was dismissed is illegal in Massachusetts, the court says the legislature could, if it wanted, pass a law making it legal. So if you really care about this, contact your state legislators.
Interesting
By Michael
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:36pm
Since taxes are abused in a widespread fashion, maybe everyone who comes in contact with the police should be held until the IRS gives them a clean bill of health, ditto the Registry for unpaid fines; I would hate to see any lawbreakers turned back out onto the streets
re: Well seeing that it's being
By Formerly-SoBo-Yuppie
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:43pm
Link to your source please. note: Fox News won't work for people that are educated.
The millions already here are
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 6:36pm
The millions already here are a pretty good source for that.
Then you aren't educated enough
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 7:25pm
Here's one among others.
wESSj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323916304578404960101110032
Like traffic violations?
By spin_o_rama
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:08pm
Somehow I don't think you'd be as keen to categorize speeding, illegal parking and such as criminal infractions. I mean those are 2 fine examples of laws that see widespread abuse.
Well, it depends...
By dmcboston
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 10:26pm
...if I'm correct, speeding over a certain speed over the posted speed (maybe 20 MPH over) can be classified as criminal.
This was done by the Legislature.
So if Juan or Sean or whomever was locked up for doing 108mph on 128, then if ICE calls, ICE gets him.
Yeah, but
By Waquiot
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:17pm
If you entered the US legally, one of the requirements of admission is to leave on or before your period of admission is over. Failure to adhere to the requirement is grounds for expulsion. Therefore, ICE is doing their job by assisting those who overstay their visas to satisfy the requirements.
To paraphrase another post on this, if the IRS has evidence that I misstated my income or otherwise didn't pay taxes owed, should I just shrug my shoulder and tell them to pound sand since it's not like I violated the law or anything? Should the DOR be able to garnish my wages for child support even when they had nothing to do with my divorce proceedings? Perhaps the immigration laws of the land should be changed, but I don't see why enforcing them is somehow wrong.
Sure, because they are doing
By bgl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 5:47pm
Sure, because they are doing their jobs. The IRS send out IRS agents (after court summons/etc). ICE can do the same thing. The BPD isn't going to hold me for being late on my taxes, just like they aren't going to hold someone that committed a civil infraction by overstaying a visa if they their court case is dismissed. ICE can keep free to, if they want, though.
True, true
By Waquiot
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 7:09pm
But if you go cheap on child support, obey the traffic laws, because you could end up in custody.
Sad that a person is far more likely to lose their license
By roadman
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 7:55pm
over failure to pay child support than for actually endangering people on the road by violating traffic laws.
I'd like to see some smart lawyer challenge that before the SJC.
After such and such a time
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:34pm
After such and such a time can we fit the illegal alien with an ankle bracelet kinda like a boot on a car?
You going to pay for it?
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:47pm
I sure as hell see no point in my tax dollars going toward that - and its 20:1 odds that I pay a heck of a lot more in taxes than you do.
I'd rather my tax dollars pay for things like, oh, food and firetrucks and schools and infrastructure.
They already do...
By John-W
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 4:13pm
...and Swirly's tax dollars (and everyone else's) go into the pockets of the contractors who issue the things -- GEO Group, CCA and the other prison-industrial complex types. Usually they issue them to women or others who need to care for children or do not seem to pose too much of a flight risk.
Not every person, though
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 4:55pm
LOL
Because ankle bracelets work so well with preventing
By roadman
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 7:57pm
serious criminals on bail from re-offending and in keeping sex offenders off the T - not!
well thats not what they are trying to do
By cinnamngrl
Tue, 07/25/2017 - 11:50am
Bracelets are good for keeping track of people while they are awaiting the next hearing. Cheaper than incarceration too.
The real thing is that if either Democrats or Republicans would follow through with reasonable immigration reform then many of these people would have legal status, and we could afford to focus on dangerous criminals that should be denied or lose any legal opportunity to be here.
You mean dangerous like the guy from this case?
By Pete Nice
Tue, 07/25/2017 - 12:01pm
He seemed like a good candidate for a bracelet....
Doing nothing wrong
By thea olmstead
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 9:23pm
The SJC decided that the feds tried to pursue a criminal detainer, but that the only avenue of relief is civil procedure, Being in the US illegally is NOT a criminal offense, but can be addressed in a civil procedure. The SJC opinion, BTW, is very clear & readable, & recommended.
you can look forward
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 7:14pm
to skyrocketing levels of corruption and total lack of professionalism in these rapidly swelling, poorly trained, and ideologically motivated ranks of ICE and CBP as well.
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/a-veteran-...
Anyone know for how long the
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:17am
Anyone know for how long the ICE detainer thing has been in practice here in Massachusetts? For how many years has the state been holding people illegally?
"holding people illegally"
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:37am
Who are here illegally! Its not illegal to detain someone who is currently in the illegally.
Yes it is
By adamg
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 6:53pm
The Supreme Judicial Court is kind of a big deal when it comes to Massachusetts law.
That's a good question. I don
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:49am
That's a good question. I don't know.
Think of all the decent people Trump is deporting needlessly. People married to Americans applying for their green card, an electrical contractor who lived n Boston, an Iranian cancer researcher who worked at Harvard, a man with two American girls who runs his own business and works night at MIT. And think of the people Trump wont let come, the Syrian kid who was admitted to MIT. I'm sure the list is much longer than the names that hit the newspaper. The theories that shaped this policy don't deliver public safety or economic growth as they claim, it's about it's nativism in a country with more people of color than Caucasians. Conservatives are freaked out and racist and acting like controlling who can come and who must go based on a broken policy will change anything. It will only weaken us.
To say that this is rather sickening is a true-blue understatemt
By mplo
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:45pm
To say that this is rather sickening is a true-blue understatement. The fact that enough people fell for Donald Trump's wording about getting rid of immigrants is rather sickening. The people who espouse these attitudes, plus Donald Trump, are screwing themselves, on top of everybody else here in the United States.
Exaggeration weakens an argument
By Sock_Puppet
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:54pm
Do you have any support for your theory that the US is a majority non-white country? Per the 2010 census, 72.4% of Americans are white.
Gotta do more than a simple wiki look
By MostlyHarmless
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:42pm
It depends on whether you include or exclude Hispanics from "white" - they're included in that 72.4%. The census has five race groups: white, black or African-American, American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander.
However, the questionnaire did ask, as a separate field, if the respondent identified as hispanic.
2010 census data reports 16% hispanics, 13% black, 5% asian, 7% other, 3% multiracial. That's still only 44% of the population, but given the rates of population growth in each category, we are now (7 years later) quite close to parity.
Incorrect
By Sock_Puppet
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:52pm
White Hispanics are included in that 72.4%. Non-white Hispanics are not. Is it really your view that there are no white people in Latin America? Perhaps you should travel more.
No.
By MostlyHarmless
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:02pm
You can see it quite clearly here: https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br... , specifically the table on p.4.
Of the total population, (100%), 72.4% are white, 12.6 are black, .9 are native american, 4.8 are asian, .2 are pacific islander, 6.2 are other, 2.9 are multiracial. "Hispanic", white or otherwise, is not on the list.
As for the second point, racial categorization is culturally dependent. There are, for example, plenty of Brazilians who would be called "blanco" in Brazil, but would be generally identified as "non-white" here.
Read on
By Sock_Puppet
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:38pm
See Page 6. 53% of Hispanics identified themselves as white. 47% identified themselves otherwise. So if you want to count a proportion of Hispanics as non-white to further your argument, you should count 47% of that 16%, or 7.5%. What you can't do, however, is subtract it from the 72.4%, because it's already subtracted. The 72.4% is the non-Hispanic whites plus the majority of Hispanics, who identify themselves as white.
And they speak Portuguese in Brazil. It's "branco."
Starting with the 2010 Census and Children
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:41pm
Actually, it depends on your definition of "non-white". If you look at the under 18 population, and include "Hispanic origin" in the "non-white" category (I know, I know), then you see that "white non-Hispanic" is indeed a minority in the 23% or so of the population under 18 years of age.
Never mind that people raised here ARE Americans and, well, who cares if they aren't "white" or European. It's all just an Alt-right panicked rallying cry.
(Second-hand reference. I tried using the Census factfinder but I know from working with it that it is incapable of doing any sort of rational search on even common queries.)
Moving the goalposts
By Sock_Puppet
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:50pm
If it's convenient to move the goalposts, we can redefine "person of color" to include white people of Hispanic origin, and we can redefine "population of the US" to mean "population of the US who are kids." But if you reserve the right to move the goalposts in this way, don't complain if someone does the opposite - it's equally legitimate. Next time somebody says that a brown person isn't really American because they weren't born here, recognize it as the opposing equivalent of the argument you just made.
Remember the ridiculous alt-right meme?
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:27pm
The one with the white baby and the text about her "being a minority in her own country"?
That's exactly the fear factor gambit going on here. Terrify people about brown hoards and, in particular, hoards of brown youth.
If you have to lump second and third generation Hispanic children in there to cook the numbers and inflate the "OMG others!" factor, well, they'll do it.
As for me, I'm still waiting for that taco truck on every corner ...
Um
By Waquiot
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:18pm
You might be surprised to learn this, but there are a lot of people in this country who identify as both Hispanic and white (particularly in Texas and northwest of Texas.) Some of them were in the US before where they lived was in the US, and some of them predate the arrival of the more established side of my family (i.e. about a century ago.)
Also, if I remember correctly, although for different reasons, Sock Puppet is one of those who have the dual identity.
Um, please reread the entire thread
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 4:56pm
Exact quote from my first post: "I know, I know"
I thought that I made it pretty damn clear that the arguments were specious, and that I wasn't supporting them - just answering sock puppet's question about "were the hell did this come from".
It's still kind of an important point
By Waquiot
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:03pm
When Mr. Puppet and I mixed it up over a year ago, I did take the position that Hispanics are indeed considered distinct from white people overall, but in the long term, the numbers might not matter. A hundred years ago, people made all sorts of noise about the growing numbers of people from Ireland, Italy, and Eastern Europe swarming over the shores of this land, but today, well, aside from you showing your biases by attacking a person whose parents came from Co. Galway with comments about how his Dorchester self must now be living in Marshfield, the descendants of those people 100 years ago are fairly integrated into white America. Therefore, the difference between saying the US is 76.9% White and 61.3% White (both from the 2016 Census estimates, and no, I'm bad at linking, so no link) is as academic as pointing out the percentage foreign born in 1920. Therefore, Puppet is as right as he is wrong.
Important
By Sock_Puppet
Tue, 07/25/2017 - 5:25am
I wonder at the ease with which you appoint yourself as the arbiter of someone else's whiteness.
Except I don't have the final judgment
By Waquiot
Tue, 07/25/2017 - 8:57am
I'm on your side this time.
That said, it will be society's judgment ultimately. Yes, it should be individuals that decide about their own race or ethnic label, but if we are being honest, it is the observations of others that has a giant effect.
You don't have to sell me
By Sock_Puppet
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:35pm
I want my damn taco truck on the corner too. And I agree about the motivations. And I fail to understand why people should be so damn attached to being melanin-deficient.
I'm just saying that imprecision and exaggeration hurt an argument, even one I agree with. I'd rather see someone I _don't_ agree with make a poor argument.
I'm going to say the majority of the time....
By Pete Nice
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:18pm
(80% or so is my estimation), someone gets arrested for anything (felony and/or misdemeanor). Person is fingerprinted, ICE gets an alert because they are connected to the fingerprint database, ICE calls department and lets them know they are coming to pick the person up. 80% of the time the person didn't make bail anyway, so the department is holding them anyway. Or, the person gets picked up in court the next morning when they show up for the arraignment and ICE is waiting there for them.
I haven't been involved with bookings/prisoners/bail processes in a while, but I do remember sometimes ICE (or any federal agency) calling before bail is issued and asking the person to be held. I think the CO of the station simply held them based on this request.
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