Under a new decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals, immigrants arrested without a warrant will not be read their rights until they are placed in formal deportation proceedings. TheĀ decision (.pdf)Ā changes a previous regulation that said that immigrants have to be informed of their rights before being questioned, after being arrested without a warrant.
Melissa Crow, director of the Legal Action Center at the American Immigration Council, said in a press release, āThe Boardās ruling renders the advisals practically meaningless and makes immigrants less likely to remain silent when questioned and less likely to assert their right to counsel.ā
The new decision makes it harder for immigration attorneys to successfully file motions to suppress evidence acquired while violating an immigrantās rights. Such motions are being used more often in deportation cases, which are themselves occurring atĀ record levels.
Although people arrested for immigration violations donāt have āMiranda rightsā per se, arresting immigration officers were required to inform immigrants of their right to an attorney and that anything they say can be used against them. Now, Crow tells The American Independent, that protection is rendered less effective because officials can inform immigrants of their rights after they given incriminating testimony while under warrantless arrest.
Technically, the decision only affects arrests by federal immigration officials. However, Secure Communities, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement program in which local law enforcement give the fingerprints of people they arrest to federal immigration officials, could reinforce the effects of the decision.
Thatās because immigrants can potentially give incriminating testimony well before federal officials place them in deportation proceedings, but after they have been flagged by Secure Communities.
The Justice Department has recently drawn praise from immigrant rights advocates for its lawsuits to block the Arizona and Alabama immigration laws. However, this new decision by the executive branch suggests that, as the Independent has previouslyĀ reported, the Obama administrationās position on immigration enforcement deviates considerably from what civil rights and immigrant rights groups would like.