The ACLU of Wisconsin conducted a study to determine how the sheriff’s departments in Wisconsin counties were participating in Donald Trump’s war on immigrants.  Among other things, we wanted to know whether counties will hold someone in jail on immigration charges for ICE and whether the department reports immigrants whom they arrest on state charges to ICE.
63 of Wisconsin’s 72 counties responded.
 
Here is what we found:
  • Only six counties were fully compliant with 4th amendment requirements that a judicial officer must sign a warrant before the country can hold someone on immigration charges alone.
  • Most counties simply have no policy at all.
  • Five counties actually encourage violation of the 4th amendment by honoring any request from ICE to detain an immigrant.
  • Most counties also lack a policy regarding questioning persons arrested about their immigration status.
  • Of the counties which have policies in place, most use flawed policies they purchased from a private company called LexiPol.
  • Five counties and the Wisconsin State Department of Justice have policies requiring sheriffs’ deputies to report to ICE any foreign-born person they book in the jail.
  • The Sheriff’s Department in the state’s largest county, Milwaukee, has no policies regarding honoring ICE detainers or questioning immigrants about their status.
  • Two counties operate detention centers for ICE
  • Waukesha County has signed an agreement to make some of its deputies ICE agents
Every sheriff's department should put in place a policy stating:
  1. No person should be questioned about his or her immigration status unless directly relevant to an investigation of a state or local charge.
  2. No stop should be conducted or prolonged for purposes of contacting federal immigration authorities.
  3. The Sheriff's Department will not honor detainer requests issued by ICE unless the detainer is accompanied by a warrant signed by a judge or magistrate (and not just signed by an ICE officer).​
  4. Every person, regardless of country of origin, is entitled to equal respect by personnel of the department.  
 

 

Date

Friday, July 20, 2018 - 12:00pm

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Organize - Immigrants - Workers - Students

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Immigrants' Rights/Derechos de los Inmigrantes

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It is now official: the Milwaukee police department will undergo sweeping reforms to end its officers’ practice of stopping and frisking people without legal justification and based only on race or ethnicity. For the last decade, tens of thousands of Black and brown Milwaukeeans have been interrupted in their daily lives by police stopping them without reasonable suspicion of criminal activity as required by the Constitution.

Milwaukee has agreed to reform its stops and frisks in the settlement of Collins v. City of Milwaukee, brought in 2017 by the plaintiffs, the ACLU, the ACLU of Wisconsin, and Covington & Burling. On July 10, Milwaukee’s Common Council approved the agreement (click here for more information), but it wasn’t final until the mayor signed the council’s resolutions about the agreement, the city attorney signed the agreement, and the parties filed it with the court today.

Of the challenges to citywide, unconstitutional stop and frisk in the U.S., Collins has resulted in the most extensive police reforms since Floyd v. City of New York in 2013.

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Friday, July 13, 2018 - 4:00pm

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MKE Police Agreement

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