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
Nope
By tachometer
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:46pm
You: "I think the CO of the station simply held them based on this request."
The article: "a man who had a criminal charge dismissed should not have been then locked up to await federal officials"
So at that point there were no criminal charges and they had no legal basis to hold the person for ICE which is a very different scenario than what you paint where people are awaiting arraignment.
I was just giving my experience.
By Pete Nice
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:58pm
Not in reference to what happened to the court officers here.
it's largely county by county
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:56pm
and can either be under 287g, which has been around nationally since 1997 (https://www.ice.gov/factsheets/287g), or Secure Communities, which has gone through a few iterations since 2008. I don't know in what years the three MA jurisdictions that have MOAs under 287g actually started, those MOA signing dates are the most recent renewals.
Boston was one of the first pilot programs for Secure Communities, actually.. of course without making it very public.
Secure Communities is an information-sharing program between local law enforcement, the FBI, and ICE, that also gives ICE the ability to request notifications and detainers, which local jurisdictions can accept or not.
287g makes local corrections and law enforcement officials into delegated ICE officials, empowered to carry out a number of Federal tasks, at local taxpayer expense.
Here's a fun and helpful interactive map: https://www.ilrc.org/local-enforcement-map
Let me guess, the MA courts
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:36am
Let me guess, the MA courts will be as a matter of unwritten policy reducing felony charges for 'special' people to misdemeanors keep them below the threshold requiring them to be held for ICE?
I seem to recall a serial bank robbing accused double murderer that received that treatment.
Didn't work out so well for the victims
Let me guess
By adamg
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:43am
You didn't read the decision. It makes a clear line between criminal offenses (and that includes misdemeanors) and civil infractions. In this particular case, the guy was facing a criminal charge, even if the nature of that charge had changed to a lesser offense. Once it was dismissed, he, well, wasn't.
Sounds like a pattern of lowering robbery charges to larceny
By O-FISH-L
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:14pm
Yet another person of dubious immigration status with a charge of robbery being reduced to simple larceny? As the saying goes, "If I get in trouble I don't want any special treatment, just treat me like an illegal alien." What is Dan Conley up to in these cases?
If this guy goes to a luxury apartment in Southie and butchers two doctors like the last guy or if he harms anyone else, Conley should resign. Commissioner Evans should also answer why BPD didn't cooperate with ICE while the very serious felony criminal charges were still pending and answer whether his police prosecutors (officers who work in the court alongside ADA's) are approving Conley's efforts to lower charges to avoid deportations. The BPD prosecutor would know hours in advance if the case wasn't moving forward and would have plenty of time to tell ICE to swing by and arrest him when the Boston case ended. They didn't. Sad.
And dubious immigration stats.
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:13pm
Can we believe the stats coming from police departments on illegal immigrant crime?
Do us a favor
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:56pm
1. express your "doubts" in something other than vague rumor-mongering statements. In other words, be far more specific in your critique of specific methodologies. Unless your goal is to cast aspersions rather than be concrete about issues.
2. Do tell us where the "actual" stats are kept and the source and methodology used in their collection. This would allow us to discuss the issue that you raised like intelligent adults rather than twittering like terrified sparrows.
What part of "charges were
By DTP
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:35pm
What part of "charges were dropped" don't you understand?
It doesn't matter what alleged crime he was initially arrested for and charged with, the charges were dropped. Which means legally he's innocent.
And this case has nothing to do with the charge being reduced from unarmed robbery to larceny - a criminal charge is still a criminal charge, and wouldn't have any bearing on the legality of holding this man until ICE showed up.
Re: This case has nothing to do with charges being reduced
By O-FISH-L
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:31pm
Of course reducing the charges is extremely relevant since larceny keeps the case in District Court (or BMC) with a maximum 2.5 year sentence in the HOC and not Suffolk Superior where unarmed robbery is punishable by life in Walpole. It's the same thing that happened with the Green Crad holder in the brutal Southie double murder. Reduce charges (2-3 bank robberies) from unarmed robbery to pickpocket and agree to a sentence of 364 days because 365 days triggers deportation. Sanctuary DA's office resulting in two dead Doctors and God knows what other mayhem that goes unreported.
What's unclear in this case is the reason for Conley's office "not being ready to move forward" with the case and why the charges were significantly lowered prior to that. Continuances are granted all the time for both sides if a witness is unavailable or an officer is on vacation. Obviously there was probable cause for arrest on unarmed robbery and a clerk magistrate also found probable cause to issue the charges at arraignment the next day. If BPD and/or the DA knew the case wasn't going forward, they would have had plenty of time to call ICE to arrest the illegal, who has been subject to a deportation order since 2008. Can't wait for Howie to obtain the police reports on the unarmed robbery and this guy's criminal/welfare record. I notice he claimed to be indigent so we paid for his lawyer. Only in America!
And your post ...
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:53pm
Sounds like a pattern of bigotry expressed in irrational support of wasting a lot of state money contrary to numerous rulings regarding the 10th amendment protections against the federal government commandeering state resources (one of the more recent having been authored by Scalia).
Commandeering state resources
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 11:27pm
Commandeering state resources? What does the 3rd Amendment have to do with this?
I seem to remember certain
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:39pm
I seem to remember certain southern states thinking that federal orders didn't apply to them. How did that go again?
Busy closet?
By Sock_Puppet
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 12:59pm
Are the fair-weather States' Rights advocates hiding in the same closet the NRA guys hid in when Philando Castile was shot for owning a gun?
As much as I didn't like the
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:14pm
As much as I didn't like the NRA before Philando Castile, their non-response to his shooting makes it clear to me they're not at all interested in gun owner rights when said gun owner is non-white.
Gun owners?
By tachometer
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:53pm
They haven't represented gun owners in decades. When you think of them as a lobbying firm for gun manufacturers ensuring that there is not legislation which will have a negative impact on sales their actions make a lot more sense.
The NSSF is the actual gun
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:05pm
The NSSF is the actual gun industry lobby
NRA, GOA, SAF, JPFO are gun owner lobbies
The NRA has a very large membership of law enforcement officers and isn't going to piss them off.
GOA, SAF, JPFO all were vocal about Castile. SAF may even be in the process of filing a lawsuit.
Recognizing a new common-law
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 1:39pm
The SJC is a little disingenuous here. They're creating a new rule, using the argument that they shouldn't create a new rule. It's not like states holding people for federal immigration violations on behalf of ICE is a brand new thing that suddenly just started in 2017. The only thing that's changed in 2017 is a new president taking office.
No new rule
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:29pm
Just recognizing old law for what it is: still the law.
That is their job, after all. Interpreting the laws and upholding precedents.
Added some details on his arrest
By adamg
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:14pm
He was charged with robbing a homeless man, who then never showed up in court. Without his testimony, there was no case.
Oh, will I'm just your
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 2:49pm
Oh, will I'm just your average young white girl working in Downtown Boston. If I stole money from a homeless person I'm sure you'd be the first to say how wrong it is. Question for you: what exactly does this guy do for a living and is he a productive member of our society? Does he pay taxes like me? Does he rent or own or do I do it for him? No further questions. Send him back.
What the court is also saying ...
By adamg
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 3:10pm
Is that if ICE wants him, they need to go get him but that Massachusetts is not going to let them violate state law to do so.
So now ICE is forced to deport pre-trial?
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 4:17pm
I don't think the pro-amnesty side thought this through.
no
By anon
Mon, 07/24/2017 - 7:09pm
they're forced to do their jobs with their own personnel on their own time and with their own money and intelligence.
well, "intelligence"
slight edit
By John-W
Tue, 07/25/2017 - 8:31am
...local law enforcement databases are already hardwired into the Department of Justice, which is accessible to Dept of Homeland Security, so our intel is their intel, as it were. You get fingerprinted and booked somewhere in the US and there is the potential for ICE to know about it (even if you're a US citizen).
The issue is that even with their explosive, bacteria-like growth of their budget, there isn't the capacity within DHS and the Border Patrol to chase-down, round-up and deport all the undocumented people in the U.S. So they need local and state law enforcement/court systems to act as an extension of their authority.
Happily the MA SJC said nope.
This is true for ATF holds
By anon
Tue, 07/25/2017 - 6:29pm
This is true for ATF holds too, right?
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