Obama Officials Misled Congress Regarding Scope of Illegal Immigration Deportation Dismissals According to Documents
Local Immigration Officials Given Wide Latitude to Dismiss Illegal Immigration Deportation Cases, Including For Those Involving Violent Crimes
Contact Information:
Press Office 202-646-5172, ext 305
- Email from Gary Goldman, Chief Counsel for Houston ICE to Riah Ramlogan, ICEâs Director of Field Operations, August 6, 2010:
I was uncertain whether to write you this short note but I am comfortable in doing so.In brief, I will push every policy that was disseminated to the Chief Counsels to my staffâŠeffectively and quickly. I understand the responsibilities of my position and I take great pride in my work. I willâŠensure each attorney is fully knowledgeable and compliant with policies regarding courtroom expectations, written work, humanitarian cases, reporting requirements, etc.
(Ramloganâs response to Goldmanâs efforts, August 10, 2010: âOutstanding, Gary.â)
- Memo from Goldman to all attorneys, Office of Chief Counsel, August 12, 2010 (ultimately rescinded per the instruction of ICE headquarters):
Beginning immediately on all duty files and court files every attorney must determine whether the case may be amenable to the exercise of prosecutorial discretion pursuant to guidelines outlined in the June 30, 2010 Assistant Secretary John Morton memorandumâŠIf the crime is remote in time and the alien has a substantial number of equities, all factors will be weighed to determine if an exercise of PD [prosecutorial discretion] is appropriate.
- Memo from Goldman to all attorneys, Office of Chief Counsel, August 16, 2010 (ultimately rescinded per the instruction of ICE headquarters):
ICE Senior Leadership does not want their attorneys to merely fill a seat in immigration court and blindly prosecute every case handed to them. The current administration wants attorneys of greater sophistication, independence and complexity in decision makingâŠ
Moreover, despite the claims of immigration officials, ICE attorneys sought to block deportation proceeding for illegal aliens with violent crime offenses. A spreadsheet obtained by Judicial Watch lists the specific violent crimes that immigration officials were prepared to overlook. They include: sexual assault, solicitation of murder, aggravated assault, assaulting a police officer, and kidnapping, as well as numerous drug charges.Following the press coverage of the memo, which resulted in widespread outrage, immigration officials sought to contain the damage by narrowing the scope of the policy change:
- An email from Raphael Choi, Chief Counsel for Arlington ICE to Gary Goldman, August 18, 2010:
âŠin-house Iâm way behind. We continue to review cases piecemeal. The problem is every time I’m about to wield a blunt instrument to our docket, some case shows up in the press that gives me pause. I think its given Riah pause too.
- Letter from Ramlogan to Goldman on the day the Houston Chronicle exposed the new policy on deportations, August 25, 2010:
I am concerned that your interpretation of the memorandum, although well-intentioned, could create a gap in basic immigration enforcement. Your approach that our attorneys should only litigate cases within the agencyâs highest priorities is not an accurate interpretation of the Assistant Secretaryâs guidance and is not consistent with agency policyâŠplease immediately rescind your memoranda.
(Note: Ramlogan had been provided a copy of Goldmanâs memo on August 10, 2010 but provided no comment until the day the Houston Chronicle story was published.)
On June 17, 2011, John Morton sent another memo to all field officers, special agents and to the chief counsel further defining the term âprosecutorial discretion.â âIn basic terms, prosecutorial discretion is the authority of an agency charged with enforcing a law to decide to what degree to enforce the law against a particular individual,â Morton writes. Critics point out that this is precisely the type of âselective enforcementâ the DHS has denied fostering with its new deportation policy.âThese documents show that the Obama administration is implementing âstealth amnesty,â which is an end-run around the rule of law and Congress.â said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. âThe Obama administration doesnât seem to care about its constitutional responsibility to âtake care that the laws be faithfully executedâ by pushing the selective enforcement of immigration laws. And they are thumbing their noses at Congress and the American people by stonewalling information requests and lying to cover up their stealth amnesty scheme. Congress should initiate a full investigation to get to the truth of the matter. The lawlessness must stop.â