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Alabama lawmakers advance local 鈥楲aken Riley鈥� bill that deputizes police to enforce immigration law

Alabama lawmakers advance local 鈥楲aken Riley鈥� bill that deputizes police to enforce immigration law
ALABAMA鈥橲 VERSION OF THE LAKE AND RILEY ACT, ALSO ADVANCING IN THE STATE HOUSE. IT WOULD GIVE STATE AND LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT MORE AUTHORITY TO ENFORCE IMMIGRATION LAWS. THIS INCLUDES ALLOWING OFFICERS TO TRANSFER A SUSPECTED ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT INTO FEDERAL CUSTODY AND TO KEEP INFORMATION ON SOMEONE鈥橲 IMMIGRATION STATUS. THE LEGISLATION IS NAMED AFTER LAKE AND RILEY, WHO WAS KILLED ON THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA CAMPUS BY A LEGAL IMMIGRANT, JOSE IBARRA, LAST YEAR.
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Alabama lawmakers advance local 鈥楲aken Riley鈥� bill that deputizes police to enforce immigration law
Alabama lawmakers advanced legislation on Thursday that would allow local law enforcement to enforce immigration law, as conservative legislators push for increased alignment with the federal government鈥檚 crackdown on immigration.The bill was dubbed 鈥淟aken Riley Act,鈥� named after the 22-year-old Augusta University student who was killed last year in Georgia by an undocumented immigrant. President Donald Trump signed a similar law into affect in January that requires the detention of unauthorized immigrants accused of theft and violent crimes.If signed into law, the Alabama version of the bill will allow local and state law enforcement agencies to enter into agreements with federal agencies to enforce the country鈥檚 immigration laws.鈥淚t鈥檚 simply a common-sense grassroots approach to help enforce already existing laws that are on the books in our community,鈥� said the bill鈥檚 sponsor, Republican Rep. Ernie Yarbrough.The bill drew swift rebuke from the House of Representative鈥檚 Democratic minority.Rep. Chris England said the bill would make profiling inevitable because he said officers are more likely to detain nonwhite people who don鈥檛 speak English. He added that the stakes are higher given the increasing frequency of detentions without a trial across the country.鈥淭he constitution can鈥檛 be situational, it can鈥檛 be circumstantial, it cannot only be when it benefits me. You have to abide by the principles in it, even when you don鈥檛 want to,鈥� he said.Yarbrough denied that the bill would encourage racial profiling, and he pointed to amendments to the bill that would require officers to check immigration status instead of nationality when someone is arrested.鈥淭he bottom line is that this bill isn鈥檛 aimed at vilifying immigrants 鈥� it鈥檚 about the safety of Alabamians,鈥� Yarbrough said.Still, some Democratic legislators pushed back. They said that it would make communities less safe because it would discourage immigrants from reporting crimes in the community.Rep. Neil Rafferty said that the bill exploits Laken Riley鈥檚 name and wouldn鈥檛 have prevented her death. 鈥淭urning local officers into de facto immigration agents damages their ability to stop crimes,鈥� Rafferty said.

Alabama lawmakers advanced legislation on Thursday that would allow local law enforcement to enforce immigration law, as conservative legislators push for increased alignment with the federal government鈥檚 crackdown on immigration.

The bill was dubbed 鈥淟aken Riley Act,鈥� named after the 22-year-old Augusta University student who was killed last year in Georgia by an undocumented immigrant. President Donald Trump into affect in January that requires the detention of unauthorized immigrants accused of theft and violent crimes.

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If signed into law, the Alabama version of the bill will allow local and state law enforcement agencies to enter into agreements with federal agencies to enforce the country鈥檚 immigration laws.

鈥淚t鈥檚 simply a common-sense grassroots approach to help enforce already existing laws that are on the books in our community,鈥� said the bill鈥檚 sponsor, Republican Rep. Ernie Yarbrough.

The bill drew swift rebuke from the House of Representative鈥檚 Democratic minority.

Rep. Chris England said the bill would make profiling inevitable because he said officers are more likely to detain nonwhite people who don鈥檛 speak English. He added that the stakes are higher given the increasing frequency of detentions across the country.

鈥淭he constitution can鈥檛 be situational, it can鈥檛 be circumstantial, it cannot only be when it benefits me. You have to abide by the principles in it, even when you don鈥檛 want to,鈥� he said.

Yarbrough denied that the bill would encourage racial profiling, and he pointed to amendments to the bill that would require officers to check immigration status instead of nationality when someone is arrested.

鈥淭he bottom line is that this bill isn鈥檛 aimed at vilifying immigrants 鈥� it鈥檚 about the safety of Alabamians,鈥� Yarbrough said.

Still, some Democratic legislators pushed back. They said that it would make communities less safe because it would discourage immigrants from reporting crimes in the community.

Rep. Neil Rafferty said that the bill exploits Laken Riley鈥檚 name and wouldn鈥檛 have prevented her death. 鈥淭urning local officers into de facto immigration agents damages their ability to stop crimes,鈥� Rafferty said.