RI Slow To Deport
Nearly four months have passed since Rhode Island became the first state to sign up for the RapidREPAT program, which allows certain nonviolent immigrants to get out of prison early on the condition they never return to the United States. But the state has yet to finish creating a way to find such inmates in the prison system. And prison officials say the first deportations are months away.
The program also drew criticism from civil liberties groups who feared immigrants might not understand the rights they were giving up. “We believe that steps need to be taken to ensure that this truly is a voluntary program,” said Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union. But officials said it’s a logical cost-cutting approach to reducing the state’s illegal immigrant population. Still, fewer than 5 percent of the state’s inmate population, which is fewer than 4,000 prisoners, was expected to qualify. “It’s someone who’s going to get deported anyway, so why don’t we deport them now rather than spending all this money on incarceration and then deporting them?” said Patricia Coyne-Fague, a lawyer for the state corrections department.
Rapid REPAT was modeled after similar programs in New York and Arizona, and federal officials said those initiatives have saved millions of dollars through early inmate release. In the past two years, about 2,600 immigrants in total were removed from both states, according to U.S. immigration officials. Prison officials said it was not clear how many people would sign up or how much the cash-strapped state would save, since the program is voluntary. Rhode Island’s participation in Rapid REPAT emerged from Gov. Don Carcieri’s effort to crack down on illegal immigration. It followed an executive order in March that required state police and parole officers to identify illegal immigrants for deportation. It also mandated that the state’s government agencies and state contractors use a federal database to validate employees’ immigration status.
To participate in Rapid REPAT, an inmate must have been sentenced for certain nonviolent criminal offenses such as car theft, drunken driving, drug possession or attempted burglary. The inmates must also be eligible for parole and be facing a final order of deportation from an immigration judge. An inmate who meets the criteria will be flagged by a new computer program. “Everything that we’re developing, we’re building from the ground up,” said corrections Director A.T. Wall. “Rhode Island doesn’t have this framework yet.”
More on this story at the AP.
Federal Systems, ICE, Immigration Issues / Illegal Aliens, Rhode Island