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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (July 22, 2016)
News Page 4 Street Roots • July 22-28,2016 The criminalization o f improper border crossings costs taxpayers billions but does little to stifle the flow o f illegal immigrants BY E M IL Y GREEN STAFF W RITER n April, members of the immigrant advocacy group Enlace rallied on the doorsteps of U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden’s Portland office. They were there to encourage the senator, whom they see as an ally, to introduce legislation that would stop private prisons from qualifying for Real Estate Investment Trust status, which allows the for-profit companies to rake in millions of dollars in tax-free revenue. They brought with them a request bearing roughly 750 signatures. Private prisons have become the sole focus of Enlace’s campaign efforts. Enlace is an immigrant and low-wage-worker advocacy alliance with offices in Portland, Los Angeles, New York and Mexico City. But why are immigrant advocates putting all their energy into taking on the prison industrial complex? About six years ago, Enlace members were growing frustrated as mass deportation was inhibiting them from effectively organizing; active members and leaders were continually arrested, incarcerated and then deported. In an effort to get at the root of the criminalization of immigrants, they began to examine what they viewed as anti-immigrant laws, said Enlace’s Portland-based campaign organizer, Amanda Aguilar Shank. And what they discovered, she said, was that “the private prison industry lobby was a driving force.” I Operation Streamline Since 2005, the lengthy incarceration of immigrants caught illegally entering the United States has cost American taxpayers $7 billion, estimates a 178-page report released July 13. “Indefensible: A Decade of Mass Incarceration of Migrants Prosecuted for Crossing the Border” chronicles how America’s current immigration policies were shaped and how the incarceration of illegal 2000, before Operation Streamline, 7,900 immigrants is contributing to our nation’s cases of felony re-entry were filed mass incarceration problem. nationwide. In 2015, that number had The full-length report is available online ballooned to 33,800. at the websites of both its authoring The crackdown on illegal border crossings organizations, national advocacy groups has drastically increased profits for private Grassroots Leadership and Justice prison companies that now operate 62 Strategies. percent of the nation’s 250 immigration Its release follows detention facilities. the 10-year The largest, anniversary of Corrections Operation Corporation-of Streamline, a policy America, listed profits put in place under of more than $1 billion the George W. Bush from 2012 to the end administration in of 2015. 2005. Nine of Corrections This policy Corporation of 33,800 Felony re-entry cases filed ushered in an era of America’s 61 in U.S. in 2015, up from 7,900 in 2000 mass criminalization correctional facilities and incarceration of are immigrant 43% Increase in deportations for unauthorized detention centers. drug possession, 2007-12 immigrants. Before There are no federal Operation immigrant detention 49% Federal prosecutions in 2015 Streamline, improper centers in Oregon. that involve illegal border crossing migration was Instead, Oregon’s typically handled as a illegal immigrants are SOURCES: Judy Greene, Justice civil, not criminal held in county jails and Strategies; Human Rights Watch and matter, and civil holding facilities before Drug Policy Alliance data; provisions were used being transferred to “Indefensible” report to remove illegal out-of-state federal immigrants when the prisons - frequently issue arose. the Northwest Inserting the criminal process is not a Detention Center in Tacoma, Wash. It’s a replacement for the civil process, said Judy federal prison reserved for immigrants, and Greene, one of the report’s authors and it’s privately owned by the second-largest director of Justice Strategies, “but simply private-prison company, GEO Group. postpones that process for days, months or Northwest Detention Center is one of the even years,” with “huge additional costs” to largest immigration prisons in the country, taxpayers. and in 2015, nearly 1,000 people were Operation Streamline made it possible to transferred from Portland District Office expeditiously prosecute mass numbers of Holding Facility to it and other immigrant immigrants by arraigning, convicting and detention centers, according to-a data sentencing up to 80 immigrants caught research group at Syracuse University called improperly entering the U.S. in the same the Transactional Records Access courtroom, at the same time. Clearinghouse, or TRAC. It also reported This has resulted in the prosecution of that 13 correctional facilities in Oregon nearly three-quarters of a million people for transferred people to immigrant detention illegal entry over the past decade. centers last year. According to Greene, during the year Many of these prisons are rife with BY THE NUMBERS abuse, leading to protests and hunger strikes, the report states. “Indefensible” found that increased felony prosecutions for re-entry, which can carry up to a two-year prison sentence, drove contracts for 13 new, privately operated immigrant detention facilities from 2000 to 2013. First-time illegal entry is a misdemeanor and carries a sentence of up to 180 days. While many who are prosecuted come into contact with the criminal justice system when they are caught crossing the border, others are deported after they are incarcerated for other crimes, which can drastically increase the length of their stay in an immigrant detention center. But when people who are prosecuted for re-entry have a prior criminal history, Greene said, they can receive a sentence many years longer than the two-year maximum. Human Rights Watch and Drug Policy Alliance have connected what they call the “war on immigrants” to the war on drugs. From 2007 to 2012, more than 250,000 deported immigrants had a drug offense as their most serious conviction, and of those, 34,000 were deported for simple marijuana possession, according to data compiled by the two groups. During that same period, deportations for people convicted of drug possession increased 43 percent Not all immigrants who get deported are here illegally. People living in the U.S. as legal residents can face deportation if they commit a crime. Today, non-citizens make up 23 percent of the federal prison population, and illegal border crossing prosecutions accounted for an astounding 49 percent of all federal prosecutions in 2015, according to “Indefensible.” ‘Nothing has worked’ A key finding of “Indefensible” is that there is no convincing evidence showing the See IM M IGRANTS, page 5