Alan Gomez
USA TODAY
September 26, 2011
WASHINGTON – A program that checks the immigration status of all people booked into local jails needs systemwide changes and may need to be suspended until its problems are worked out, according to a review conducted by the Department of Homeland Security’s advisory council.
The program, called Secure Communities, allows Homeland Security to review the fingerprints of people arrested by state and local law enforcement agencies against federal immigration databases.
The program has been criticized because some people arrested for minor crimes, or on charges that are later dropped, are detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials, sometimes resulting in deportation.
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This has been initiated by two Santa Monica cops (who , and the way it’s happened,will not be revealed for time being) earlier this year, first came a move in California legislature to suspend participation in the Secure Communities and now this. If there is enough lynch mob develops the cops names may become public.