ICE says it will automatically vet juvenile immigrants fingerprints
In a blow to San Francisco’s sanctuary law, the fingerprints of juvenile immigrants charged with serious offenses will also be automatically forwarded to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
In what appears to be another blow for San Francisco’s sanctuary laws, officials for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) say the fingerprints of juvenile immigrants charged with serious offenses will also be automatically forwarded to ICE.
“My colleagues in SF advise that the fingerprints of juveniles arrested for criminal offenses will also be vetted through Secure Communities,” Virginia Kice, ICE’s Western Regional Communications Director, told the Guardian.
San Francisco Bay Guardian’s Sarah Phelan quotes Sup. David Campos to say that “If that’s the case, that’s pretty significant.” Campos was under the impression that the Secure Communities initiative would not touch juveniles. The thinking, Campos said, was that juveniles’ fingerprints were handled through a separate database and therefore would be exempt from the new federal initiative.
Sheriff Mike Hennessey, who does not handle juvenile detainees, told the Guardian, “If I had to guess, I would say that Ms. Kice is correct, but it’s possible that the computer could be bifurcated.”