Immigration Reform Advocates: Heavy-Handed Obama Deportations Hit Minor Offenders, Not Serious Criminals

The record level of deportations -- under President Obama, 2 million people have been deported --is the most contentious part of the currently stalled immigration reform debate. Lawmakers and activists have been asking for administrative relief for those who would qualify for legal status should Congress pass the immigration bill approved last year by the Senate. They argue that too many families are being broken apart and breadwinners deported over minor infractions.

Veronica Dahlberg, executive director at HOLA Ohio, a grassroots Latino organization in northeast Ohio, said she has for years seen immigrants who should be low on the administrations radar swept up in dragnets and channeled through the deportation system for things like a simple traffic violation.

Its finally shedding a light on what is really happening versus what the administration says is happening, Dahlberg said during a conference hosted by pro-reform group Americas Voice. The White House says deportations target serious offenders.

Only 20 percent of the deportation cases under President Barack Obama, or fewer than 400,000 people, were convicted of serious crimes, the Times analysis of administration records show. But the Times analysis isnt the only one offering some vindication to activists on-the-ground observations.

The Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University also analyzed millions of deportation records since the launch of Secure Communities, a controversial program that formally began in 2008 to rid communities across America of criminal aliens who pose a public safety threat. TRAC found that in fiscal year 2013, only 12 percent of all deportees had serious Level 1 offenses, which by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agencys definition includes acts such homicide, kidnapping and sexual assault. The most serious convictions for approximately half the deportees were immigration and traffic violations.

Its so sad and incredible that all these things are happening, said Monica Garcia, regional coordinator for Border Network for Human Rights in Las Cruces, N.M. Deportation under Obama is just very sad.

Garcia said she is not opposed to law enforcement doing their job, but she wants them to follow the discretion principles under the current law and prioritize cases of serious offenders.

Our community is still in fear, she said. We feel insecure. We feel persecuted instead of being protected.

Even legal experts are concerned about the revelations of these independent analyses of administration data.

Those of us on the ground here, now we know were not crazy, said David Leopold, an immigration attorney in Cleveland and the past president of American Immigration Lawyers Association.

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Immigration Reform Advocates: Heavy-Handed Obama Deportations Hit Minor Offenders, Not Serious Criminals

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