BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                AB 1081
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        CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS
        AB 1081 (Ammiano)
        As Amended  August 15, 2012
        Majority vote
         
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        |ASSEMBLY:  |47-26|(May 26, 2011)  |SENATE: |24-13|(August 21,    |
        |           |     |                |        |     |2012)          |
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         Original Committee Reference:    PUB. S.  

         SUMMARY  :  Prohibits law enforcement officials from detaining an 
        individual based on an immigration hold when the individual is 
        otherwise eligible for release from criminal custody, unless 
        specified conditions are met.  

         The Senate amendments  :  
         
        1)State that a law enforcement official has the discretion to detain 
          an individual on the basis of an immigration hold after that 
          individual becomes eligible for release from criminal custody if 
          both of the following conditions are satisfied:

           a)   The individual has been convicted of a serious or violent 
             felony according to a criminal background check or 
             documentation provided to the law enforcement official by the 
             United States (U.S.) Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) 
             or is currently in custody for a charge of serious or violent 
             felony by a district attorney; and, 

           b)   The continued detention of the individual on the basis of 
             the immigration hold would not violate any federal, state, or 
             local law, or any local policy.

        2)Prohibit an individual from being detained on the basis of an 
          immigration hold after that individual becomes eligible for 
          release from criminal custody, if either of the conditions set 
          forth above is not satisfied.

        3)Define "eligible for release from criminal custody" to mean that 
          the individual may be released from criminal custody because one 
          of the following conditions have been met:

           a)   All criminal charges against the individual have been 








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             dropped or dismissed;

           b)   The individual has been acquitted of all criminal charges 
             filed against him or her;

           c)   The individual has served all the time required for his or 
             her sentence;

           d)   The individual has posted a bond; or,

           e)   The individual is otherwise eligible for release under state 
             or local law, or local policy.

        4)Define "immigration hold" to mean an immigration detainer issued 
          by an authorized immigration officer pursuant to federal law that 
          requests that the law enforcement official maintain custody of the 
          individual for a period not to exceed 48 hours excluding 
          Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, and to advise the authorized 
          immigration officer prior to the release of that individual.

        5)Define "law enforcement official" as any local agency or officer 
          of a local agency authorized to enforce criminal statutes, 
          regulations, or local ordinances or to operate jails or to 
          maintain custody of individuals in jails, and any person or local 
          agency authorized to operate juvenile detention facilities or to 
          maintain custody of individuals in juvenile detention facilities.

        6)Define "local agency" as any city, county, city and county, 
          special district, or other political subdivision of the state.

        7)Define "serious felony" as any of the offenses listed in 
          subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code and any 
          offense committed in another state which, if committed in 
          California, would be punishable as a serious felony as defined by 
          subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.

        8)Define "violent felony" as any of the offenses listed in 
          subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code and any offense 
          committed in another state which, if committed in California, 
          would be punishable as a violent felony as defined by subdivision 
          (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code.

        9)Declares the findings of the Legislature that ICE's Secure 
          Communities program (S-Comm) shifts the burden of federal civil 
          immigration enforcement onto local law enforcement.  To operate 








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          the Secure Communities program, ICE relies on voluntary requests 
          to local law enforcement to hold individuals for additional time 
          beyond when they would be eligible for release in a criminal 
          manner.

        10)Declare the findings of the Legislature that state and local law 
          enforcement agencies are not reimbursed for the full cost of 
          responding to a detainer, which can include, but is not limited 
          to, extended detention time and the administrative costs of 
          tracking and responding to detainers. 

        11)Declare the findings of the Legislature that unlike criminal 
          detainers, which are supported by a warrant and require probable 
          cause, there is no requirement for a warrant and no established 
          standard of proof such as reasonable suspicion or probable cause, 
          for issuing an ICE detainer request.  Immigration detainers have 
          erroneously been placed on U.S. citizens as well as immigrants who 
          are not deportable.

        12)Clarify the intent of the Legislature that this act shall not be 
          construed as providing, expanding, or ratifying the legal 
          authority for any state or local law enforcement agency to detain 
          an individual on an immigration hold.

        13)Define "conviction" as a prior conviction for a serious or 
          violent felony as specified in existing provisions of law.

        14)Delete requirement that the local agency must adopt a plan to 
          monitor and guard against a U.S. citizen being detained pursuant 
          to an immigration hold, racial profiling and victim and witnesses 
          to crimes being discouraged from reporting crimes.

        15)State that the provisions of this act are severable and if any 
          provision or its application is held invalid, that invalidity 
          shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be 
          given effect without the invalid provisions or application.

         EXISTING LAW  :  Requires, under S-Comm, developed by the U.S. 
        Department of Homeland Security and ICE in March 2008, that 
        participating local law enforcement agencies submit arrestees' 
        fingerprints to ICE and Federal Bureau of Investigation databases, 
        the U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology Program 
        (US-VISIT), and Automated Biometric Identification System (IDENT), 
        and allows these federal agencies to access the arrestee's 
        documented criminal and immigration history.  According to ICE 








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        statements and materials, S-Comm is intended to target dangerous 
        criminals and those who pose threats to public safety. 

        S-Comm is intended to identify and prioritize for removal 
        undocumented immigrants based on the following classifications: 

        1)Level 1 - Individuals who have been convicted of major drug 
          offenses and violent crimes such as murder, manslaughter, rape, 
          robbery or kidnapping.

        2)Level 2 - Individuals who have been convicted of minor drug and 
          property offenses such as burglary, larceny, fraud, and money 
          laundering.

        3)Level 3 - Individuals who have been convicted of other offenses. 

        On April 10, 2009, the California's Department of Justice (DOJ) 
        entered into a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with ICE to implement 
        S-Comm in California counties. 

         AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY  , this bill required ICE to modify the 
        current S-Comm agreement with California to allow counties to 
        participate in the program only upon the passage of an ordinance or 
        resolution authorizing participation.  Specifically,  this bill  :  

        1)Required the modified agreement to include the following 
          exemptions and limitations to S-Comm:

           a)   Protections for domestic violence victims; and,

           b)   Protections for juveniles.

        2)Required a local government that opts to participate in the 
          program to prepare a plan to monitor and guard against racial 
          profiling, discouraging reporting by domestic violence victims, 
          and harming community policing overall.  This plan shall be deemed 
          a public record for purposes of the Public Records Act.

        3)Limited sharing of fingerprints under S-Comm to those of 
          individuals convicted, rather than merely accused, of a crime.

        4)Prohibited obtaining fingerprints for the purposes of S-Comm 
          program through the use of checkpoints, and the stopping of 
          individuals solely based on perceived immigration status.









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        5)Required that ICE establish a complaint mechanism that allows for 
          expedited review of claims by those put into immigration removal 
          proceedings prior to conviction as a result of S-Comm. 

        6)Required that ICE make available to the public on its Internet Web 
          site quarterly statistics on S-Comm in California, including 
          information on the following:

           a)   Number of searches to IDENT; 

           b)   Number of matches to IDENT;

           c)   Number of detainers issued by ICE based on Level 1, Level 2, 
             and Level 3 offense categories;

           d)   Number of detainers issued by ICE where charges are never 
             filed, are later dismissed or where there is ultimately no 
             conviction;

           e)   Number of Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 arrestees who are 
             transferred into ICE custody after being subjected to an ICE 
             detainer, where charges are never filed, are later dismissed or 
             where there is ultimately no conviction;

           f)   Number of identified detainees prosecuted criminally in 
             federal court;

           g)   Number of identified detainees removed from the U.S.;

           h)   Number of identified U.S. citizens and persons with lawful 
             status identified through S-Comm; and,

           i)   Nationality, age, and gender of individuals identified and 
             removed through S-Comm.

        7)Stated that ICE must terminate the MOA if these requirements 
          cannot be fulfilled.

         FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Senate Appropriations Committee, 
        pursuant to Senate Rule 28.8, negligible state costs.

         COMMENTS  :  According to the author, "S-Comm is an extremely 
        problematic program that enlists local law enforcement to engage in 
        civil immigration enforcement through the sharing of biometric data 
        at the point of arrest.  The program automatically leads to 








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        investigation of the immigration background of every individual, 
        citizen or non-citizen, at the point of arrest by electronically 
        crosschecking fingerprints through an immigration database allowing 
        ICE officials to detain and deport undocumented individuals - 
        without the basic right to a day in court.

        "While the United States' ICE stated mission for the controversial 
        S-Comm program is to target serious offenses, the program casts far 
        too wide a net.  ICE's own data shows over 70% of people deported 
        under S-Comm had no convictions or were accused only of minor 
        offenses.  Unfortunately, this program is unfairly impacting 
        innocent people, victims of crime, and even survivors of domestic 
        violence who have called the police for help.

        "This program is eroding trust between immigrant communities and 
        local law enforcement because immigrant residents who are victims or 
        witnesses to a crime now fear cooperating with police since any 
        contact can now result in separation from their families and 
        deportation.  As a result, years of community policing initiatives 
        are ruined as entire communities lose trust in law enforcement and 
        stop reporting crimes or seeking help.  S-Comm makes us all less 
        safe and sends the state in the wrong direction.  The program is 
        exactly what ICE said it is not supposed to be, a simple tool for 
        mass, indiscriminate non-criminal immigration enforcement.

        "In addition to the public safety concerns, S-Comm has also failed 
        to provide accountability and transparency.  ICE has given 
        contradictory and inconsistent answers to questions from Congress, 
        media, and local officials regarding the participation of unwilling 
        jurisdictions.  This bill brings S-Comm out of its shadowy 
        misinformation and creates clear reporting requirements that let us 
        know how it's operating and who is impacted.

        "Forcing this problematic program on localities against their will 
        creates an undue burden and jeopardizes local community policing 
        strategies.  This bill enables municipalities concerned with the 
        inherent problems of S-Comm to choose not to participate while those 
        who opt-in will have the option to do so with safeguards to protect 
        our communities from the program's pitfalls.  This bill adds 
        safeguards to protect Californians and prevent civil rights 
        violations.  If localities want to participate, this bill will 
        require a plan to prevent racial profiling and keep children, crime 
        victims, or survivors of domestic violence from being wrongfully 
        targeted."









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        Please see the policy committee analysis for a full discussion of 
        this bill.
         

        Analysis Prepared by  :    Stella Choe / PUB. S. / (916) 319-3744 


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