A4 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, NOvEmbER 20, 2021 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 SHANNON ARLINT Circulation manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production manager CARL EARL Systems manager OUR VIEW ICE dodges legitimate questions A government agency that acts too highfalutin to pro- vide citizens with straight answers is a risk to democracy. Inde- pendents, progressives and conser- vatives should all be united in fight- ing unjustified government secrecy. A desire by some bureaucracies to hide their actions isn’t uncom- mon. However, from one presiden- tial administration to the next, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforce- ment shows a particularly dismis- sive disdain for citizen oversight. Its highhanded secrecy and unac- countability certainly plunged to new depths during President Don- ald Trump’s term, but it was far from adequate under President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama. It continues its haughty ways under President Joe Biden. Too used to treating undocu- mented immigrants as things to be hunted, ICE appears to also think citizens are inconsequential, to the extent that it considers itself effec- tively beyond the reach of the Free- dom of Information Act. This self-sabotage of its own credibility is doubly hurtful, since few Americans dispute the agency’s central impor- tance in ensuring rational compli- ance with validly enacted immigra- tion laws. A notorious scofflaw when it comes to FOIA, ICE has faced numerous lawsuits on the subject, including one by the University of Washington. And in 2018, ICE and Cowlitz County took the unprece- dented step of suing UW’s Center for Human Rights “for seeking the lawful release of information” about a program that detained undocu- mented youths. This region’s close-up view of ICE activities is well known. In 2006, in an example predat- ing Trump, other federal agencies assisted ICE in detaining 16 work- ers at a Chinook seafood plant. But things really came to a head in 2017, when ICE mounted a full-scale Associated Press IT WOuLd bE AN uNFORTuNATE EXAGGERATION TO CLAIm, AS SOmE dO, THAT ICE OPERATES AS A FORm OF SECRET POLICE WITH INAdEQuATE OvERSIGHT INSIdE u.S. bORdERS. buT IT RISKS AddITIONAL dAmAGE TO ITS ALREAdy TARNISHEd REPuTATION by LEGALISTICALLy dOdGING LEGITImATE QuESTIONS POSEd FOR vALId NEWSGATHERING PuRPOSES. safari in Pacific County, Washing- ton, in ways that garnered cover- age in the Chinook Observer, Seat- tle Times, New York Times and BBC. These reports relied on inter- views with affected immigrants — at least until ICE tactics intimidated them into silence. At the same time, the Chinook Observer sought details from ICE itself — efforts that were invariably ignored or addressed in only the most superficial ways. On March 1, 2019, the Observer’s Alyssa Evans made a fresh effort via FOIA to pry information from the agency. It took ICE until October to respond, a lapse of more than 2 1/2 years. The request was simple: A list of all individuals arrested or detained by ICE within Pacific County since Jan. 1, 2008, what city they were arrested in, and the day and time they were arrested. In its egregiously delayed response, ICE declined to provide any of this information. ICE cites various purported exceptions to the FOIA law to explain its decision, which the news- paper is appealing. One of these justifications seems at least nomi- nally defensible, while others will strike most people as shallow and spurious. Releasing detainees’ names, it claims, would be “a clearly unwar- ranted invasion of personal privacy.” Admittedly, having your name dis- closed could embarrass an ICE detainee. But such delicacy isn’t an issue for federal and state prisons, or for county jails, where inmates’ names are openly available even before conviction. Any privacy right would seem to be counterbalanced by a detainee’s interest in not being confined and deported in secrecy. Having the names is essential in attempting to discover what became of detainees, locating family mem- bers, seeing whether detainees cycle in and out of custody and the coun- try, and learning whether they have been convicted of non-immigra- tion-related crimes. ICE refuses to release the dates and times of arrests, alleging that doing so would compromise future immigration enforcement efforts by revealing “techniques and/or pro- cedures” or “disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations.” ICE claims “the techniques and pro- cedures at issue are not well known to the public.” More understandably, it says it can’t break out an individ- ual county’s arrests since they are lumped within the larger Seattle Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations, which apparently covers all of Washington state and Oregon. It is difficult to see how learn- ing apprehension dates and times would harm enforcement efforts, the patterns of which are well known within the immigrant community and by the wider public. Getting this information will tell all of us how the emphasis on local immigrants changes between presidential admin- istrations, along with newswor- thy insights about whether people are detained singly or in the course of larger raids that might sweep up many people. Learning in which jurisdiction immigrants are arrested will provide an idea about where ICE expends its efforts, which appear to wax and wane with little obvious reason. It would be an unfortunate exag- geration to claim, as some do, that ICE operates as a form of secret police with inadequate oversight inside U.S. borders. But it risks addi- tional damage to its already tar- nished reputation by legalistically dodging legitimate questions posed for valid newsgathering purposes. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Appreciation I ’m writing to express my appreciation for the Warrenton-Hammond School District bus drivers. They regularly yield their right of way, and wave me on to make a left from S.W. Ninth Street onto S. Main Avenue, a congested intersection at 7:42 a.m. on school days. I’m continually grateful each and every time. Thank you! LAUREN MALLETT Warrenton Begging W hen The Astorian becomes depen- dent upon governmental aid to keep its jobs, its integrity is compromised. The writer of “A light on our democracy” (Nov. 13) notes that this is not about the government putting its hand on certain types of speech. Really! The questions remain: Why does The Astorian need to beg the government for tax credits? What will The Astorian owe the government for that gift? How will it be able to investigate governmental cor- ruption? Who will be the next generation of journalists, government employees? Newspapers, and all media, need to be independent of government strings. They need to be free to investigate lies and cor- ruption without bias. Is not the EO Media Group capable of that without begging for governmental handouts? ROBERT LIDDYCOAT Seaside Mainstream H ow do you suppose the “mainstream” media got to be mainstream? In our consumer-driven society, it’s because, over time, they proved themselves to be reliable sources of true reporting of facts, and the voice of thoughtful, useful opinions. In my youth I worked for the State Department, in communications, and held a top-secret “crypto” security clearance. And, I was constantly amazed how con- sistently right-on the mainstream Ameri- can and “Western” media of the day — the TV networks and the Associated Press and Time and Newsweek and Life magazines, etc. — were, in their analyses of foreign affairs and current events, including Cold War military matters. Because all they had to do was ask themselves, in each situation, what was in the best interest of the people of the U.S., and presume that was the position of the U.S. government. That simple formula was uncan- nily accurate. Not perfectly, but almost. Because the people who worked in our government were dedicated to that princi- ple. There were, and still are thousands of them, and they stand tall. I believe that holds true today, despite the best efforts of Steve Bannon and Ste- phen Miller and former President Donald Trump and their boot-lickers and lackeys at Fox News to subvert, distort and negate all of that. On Veterans Day, I celebrate those vets who didn’t, and don’t wear uniforms, as well as those who did, and do. JOSEPH WEBB Astoria