Immigration
Undocumented Aurora mother of 4 detained for deportation by ICE after years of compliance: lawyer
DENVER – An undocumented woman from Aurora with a single conviction for driving without a license is set to be deported by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement after she was detained Wednesday in Centennial, according to her lawyer.
Maria de Jesus Jimenez Sanchez is a mother of four, including a developmentally-disabled daughter, and has lived in Aurora since 1999, according to her lawyer, Lakewood attorney Jennifer Kain-Rios.
Though Jimenez Sanchez received a deportation order in 2001, according to Kain-Rios, she was able to stay in the country.
In 2012, Jimenez Sanchez was pulled over and cited for driving without a license, after which she spent six months in detention by immigration officials, according to her attorney. Colorado now allows undocumented immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses.
But Jimenez Sanchez was granted a stay of removal, which has been renewed for the past four years because of her’s daughters condition, until she learned that the most recent request for a stay had been denied last month. She was picked up in Centennial Wednesday when she showed up for her routine immigration check-in despite knowing her stay had been denied, her lawyer says.
“Maria de Jesus complied with her check in appointment yesterday because she hoped that ICE would restrain itself, considering her good-faith efforts to comply with her Order of Supervision,” Kain-Rios said. “Maria de Jesus asked for the assistance of Rep. Coffman and Sen. Bennet’s offices to obtain a meaningful explanation, but only received curt and opaque responses from ICE.”
Kain-Rios says when they spoke with Coffman, he said that enforcement policies had changed under the new administration.
Jimenez Sanchez went to the meeting because she and her attorney had asked for an appeal of her stay’s rejection and they thought they would get an explanation for its denial, Kain-Rios told Denver7.
Kain-Rios says Jimenez Sanchez has four children: the 15-year-old developmentally-disabled daughter, and three other children aged 7, 8 and 19.
“[Jimenez Sanchez] has a critical meeting regarding her daughter’s education plan next week she needs to attend,” Kain-Rios said. “She wants to stay so she can continue to take care of her children.”
When reached for comment Thursday, an ICE spokesman told Denver7 he did not have information on the case readily available.
The children of another Denver-area undocumented woman, Jeanette Vizguerra, sent off for Washington Wednesday to protest ICE immigration enforcement actions, which the Department of Homeland Security has vowed to enforce more-strictly under the new administration.
Vizguerra and another Denver-area woman have sought sanctuary at local churches, as both are scheduled to be deported. Vizguerra’s situation is similar to Jimenez Sanchez’s as both saw their stays of deportation denied after several years of seamless compliance.
Nearly all of Colorado’s law enforcement agencies say they are in compliance with federal immigration rules.
Coffman extends olive branch to progressives, but stands strong on health care decision in town hall
AURORA, Colo. – Rep. Mike Coffman made headlines Wednesday when he said that White House press secretary Sean Spicer “needs to go,” but the five-term Congressman from Colorado’s first in-person town hall of the year saw much more of a focus from those in attendance on the ongoing debate over the U.S. health care system.
Slated to speak with constituents at the CU Anschutz campus for an hour, Coffman instead listened to tough questions and demands from constituents for an additional 45 minutes, sometimes trying to find an olive branch and other times rebuffing those in attendance.
The roughly 800-person capacity room was not entirely filled despite tickets to the event selling out ahead of time. And the lengthy rules list for the event, which banned yelling, among other things, was never quite enforced. Though progressive groups protested Coffman both before and after the event, it’s unclear if any of the people who showed up solely to protest asked questions inside.
Many of the three-dozen or so people who asked questions pressed Coffman on his support for the American Health Care Act, the Paul Ryan-backed plan to repeal and replace Obamacare that was pulled before it could face a perhaps-embarrassing failed vote in the full House.
“Are you going to side with Trump or…stand with your constituents?” asked one woman.
“What will it take you to vote with your constituents?” another pressed.
“I voted for you because I thought you’d be a leader,” one constituent said, according to Politico’s coverage of the event. “I don’t see you leading.”
Still others asked about the pre-existing conditions, and others pressed Coffman on Medicaid, which hundreds of thousands of Coloradans utilize for health care coverage and the AHCA would have cut significantly over the next 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Coffman said he ran on the idea that he would repeal and replace Obamacare, which is why he carried through supporting the Republican proposal, though he said he would “protect those with pre-existing conditions.”
Coffman has already been targeted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee as a seat Democrats hope they can flip in 2018.
His district, Colorado’s 6th, went to Hillary Clinton by 9 percentage points in 2016, and also went to Sen. Michael Bennet by a wide margin in 2014.
He already faces a challenge from Democrat Jason Crow, a Denver attorney who is a former paratrooper and Ranger in the U.S. Army who declared his candidacy Monday. A 25-year-old newcomer, Gabriel McArthur, is also running on the Democratic side.
Still, both face uphill battles to de-seat Coffman, who beat Morgan Carroll in 2016 by 31,000 votes – a few thousand fewer than he won by when he defeated Andrew Romanoff in 2014.
The last close election Coffman faced was in 2012, when he beat out Democrat Joe Mikloski by just 7,000 votes. That race also had fairly strong turnouts for Libertarian and independent candidates.
The district was the only in the state that saw a margin of victory between the candidates less than 10 percent in 2016.
But Coffman on Wednesday tried to find ways to meet Democrats in the audience and Republicans who are not pleased with Trump somewhere in the middle – something he did during the 2016 election but which has been mostly forgotten after his support for the AHCA.
He said he was “heading in [the] direction” of supporting having an independent counsel investigate possible ties between Russia and Trump associates.
He also said he supported a proposed law forcing the president, vice president and members of Congress to release their tax returns.
Immigration also came up, and Coffman said he would like to see undocumented immigrants who “have broken our immigration laws but haven’t broken our other laws” to “come out of the shadows.”
But the most noteworthy statement of the night for most opposed to Trump came at the end of the session, when Coffman was asked about Spicer’s comments, which he apologized for afterward, in which he said that Hitler didn’t use chemical weapons during World War II while comparing that to the gassing of civilians in Syria.
“He needs to go,” Coffman said of Spicer after being pressed on the issue.
But the seasoned Republican didn’t give in entirely to the crowd, saying that those “on the extreme left” would “never be satisfied,” while saying he would continue to vote as he felt necessary.
“When I disagree with the president, I will speak out against the president,” Coffman said. “But I’m not going to do it every other day.”
Coffman follows up town hall with interview Thursday
On the topic of healthcare, Coffman told Denver7 reporter Marc Stewart in an interview Thursday that he hopes the Republicans will likely write another healthcare bill.
“Do you think this is something we would see by the end of the year?” asked Stewart.
“I hope so,” Coffman said. “I mean, in my view, the end of the year is too late. I think we need to do it as soon as possible.”
He said he hopes that happens “in the next couple months.”
On immigration, Coffman sides with the president about securing the border, but feels policies also need to be realistic, especially when it comes to DREAMers.
“I think there ought to be some kind of DREAM Act for the young people that would allow them — through military service, through education, through work history — to have a path to citizenship.”
As far as undocumented immigrants living here now, Coffman provided no promises.
“Should you have that concern you could picked up by an ICE agent for no other reason than your citizenship status?” asked Sewart.
“I’m not going to speak to that,” Coffman said. “I think the administration is looking at different directions. I mean, they’re in violation of the law, and that’s why we have to reform the law.”
Colorado sheriffs pleased with ICE’s suspension of ‘erroneous’ weekly ‘sanctuary city’ report
DENVER – The Denver Sheriff Department is welcoming the decision by federal immigration officials to stop publishing a controversial weekly report targeting jurisdictions deemed “uncooperative” with federal immigration enforcement efforts.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement started releasing the report in late March, but it quickly drew backlash from law enforcement agencies and various cities and counties around the country that said the report contained erroneous information. So-called “sanctuary cities” have been targeted under the new administration and threatened with the loss of federal funding. Continue reading
Denver officials ask ICE to ‘respect’ courts, schools
DENVER – Denver’s mayor, city council and legal representatives sent a letter Thursday to the local U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office requesting agents stay away from “sensitive locations,” including schools and courthouses, while performing their duties.
The letter asks ICE officials to stay in line with an October 2011 ICE memo called “Enforcement Actions at or Focused on Sensitive Locations” that agents “avoid unnecessarily alarming local communities” and to take caution and care when enforcing federal immigration law near the “sensitive locations.” Continue reading
ICE agents arrest 21 in four-day sweep in Colorado
DENVER – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested 21 people in Colorado and five in Wyoming in an enforcement raid on undocumented immigrants that took place March 31-April 3.
ICE says all 26 people arrested had prior criminal convictions, and that 23 of them had previously been convicted of possessing or selling illegal drugs, domestic violence, DUI, illegal entry, larceny or sex offenses.
The agency gave no names of those arrested.
The 21 arrested in Colorado were arrested in various cities:
- Arvada: 2
- Aurora: 11
- Commerce City: 3
- Denver: 1
- Frederick: 1
- Thornton: 2
- Yuma: 1
The five arrested in Wyoming were all taken into custody in Jackson.
ICE says that all the people were arrested were men between the ages of 18 and 56. Eighteen were Mexican nationals; four were Honduran; two were Salvadoran; one was from Costa Rica and one was from Indonesia.
The agency noted four specific cases of people who were arrested in the roundup who had previously been convicted of serious crimes or multiple DUIs.
ICE says all of them men arrested “were amenable to arrest and removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act” and that the agency “frequently encounter[s] other aliens illegally present in the United States” while conducting such operations.
“They are evaluated on a case-by-case basis, and, when appropriate, they are arrested by ICE officers,” the agency says.
The announcement came on the same day many of Denver city officials sent a letter to the ICE Denver field office asking ICE agents to avoid “sensitive locations” like courthouses and schools when conducting their operations.
The latest operation comes as ICE has started putting out weekly updates targeting cities across the country that it says are “uncooperative” with President Donald Trump’s new immigration orders, the first of which targeted several cities in Colorado, including Denver.
It is part of an effort to strip federal funding so-called “sanctuary cities” that don’t cooperate with ICE agents, though Boulder is the only Colorado city with an official proclamation on the books that it is a sanctuary city.
And Attorney General Jeff Sessions recently called out a case in Denver involving a spat between Denver Sheriff Department officials and ICE agents over the release of an undocumented immigrant in December who later allegedly killed a man.
And at least two Denver-area undocumented women have sought refuge at Denver churches to avoid deportation. Churches have also often been considered sensitive locations.
“Our ICE enforcement operations improve public safety by removing criminal aliens from our communities, and drunk drivers from our roads,” said Jeffrey Lynch, field office director for ERO Denver. “This was a focused four-day operation, but our routine operations occur daily.”
ICE says most of those arrested in the latest sweep now have either pending deportations or will be deported once their charges have run the course through local or federal court systems.
ICE report targets ‘uncooperative’ cities in Colorado; local agencies say they’re in line with law
DENVER – Several Colorado agencies are named in the first weekly report issued by federal immigration authorities that documents where undocumented immigrants committed crimes and which local law enforcement agencies allegedly failed to comply with immigration detainers.
But the report is already raising eyebrows among the agencies in Colorado, as well as other in other cities across the country, who say the report from the Department of Homeland Security gets some of the data wrong and falsely accuses them of not honoring federal law in the latest fight over “sanctuary city” status. Continue reading
Authorities: 16 indicted in connection to illegal marijuana distribution raids in Colorado
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, Colo. – Sixteen people were indicted on felonies, including drug and organized crime charges, in relation to Thursday’s large-scale marijuana raid that targeted an illegal grow and out-of-state distribution ring operating in Colorado.
The raids happened Thursday in Denver, Arapahoe, Douglas, Elbert and El Paso counties.
Of the 16 people indicted, 18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler said at a joint news conference with DEA and Douglas County Sheriff’s Office authorities Friday afternoon that 15 of them were already in custody.
Read the indictments by clicking here.
Brauchler said the suspects’ ages range from 28 to 63 years old.
He said the investigation started last August in Elbert County, where 2,500 pounds of marijuana were found, but that it “turned into a much longer and broader investigation.”
He said that the group was growing close to 300 pounds of marijuana each month, which was all distributed to states across the country, including Arkansas, Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, and possibly Florida and New Mexico, according to Brauchler.
Around 2,000 plants were taken from just one Denver warehouse Thursday during the raid.
Brauchler added that not only was the ring allegedly growing and distributing marijuana flower, but was also making and distributing hash oil. He said many of the transactions took place in broad daylight, including at an Aurora school’s parking lot and at a Castle Rock Starbucks.
The Drug Enforcement Agency’s Barbara Roach said the marijuana was specifically being grown to be sold and distributed out of state, and said she believes that people are coming to Colorado specifically for that reason.
Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Steve Johnson said that Colorado was fostering the “criminal enterprises,” and that illegal home grows are being found “on a daily basis.”
Nineteen locations were raided Thursday, during which authorities said they also seized 39 weapons.
Though there has been much apprehension over what new Attorney General Jeff Sessions will do when it comes to overseeing federal law enforcement regarding state laws on legal marijuana, the DEA says Thursday’s raids were not part of a new directive.
The Colorado Legislature is currently hashing out at least two bills aimed at cracking down on illegal marijuana grows. One of the bills would limit medical patients to grow only 16 plants – down from the current number of 99 – in an effort to further hamper illegal grows.
Local jurisdictions are allowed under state law to establish grow limits for recreational users, but the state law has capped the limit at six.
But large-scale growers have to have special licenses and oversight and are required to sell their product inside the state.
The 16 people indicted in relation to the raids are as follows:
- Rudy Saenz, 62
- Michael Stonehouse, 53
- Ted Stonehouse, 51
- Tilden Lazaro, 26
- Raciel Martinez, 52
- John Cathey, 63
- Vincent Castillo, 33
- William “Todd” Garner, 58
- Jerram Cathey, 27
- John Mason Cathey, 27
- Myisha Evans, 38
- Vernon Watts, 46
- Jason Jones, 46
- Amy Jones, 28
- John Ramsay, 45
- Jibaro Smith, 45
The 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office says Jibaro Smith is the one outstanding suspect.
Colorado undocumented immigrant student supports bill expanding license, ID program in state
DENVER – Colorado’s undocumented community and immigrants’ rights groups say the program allowing undocumented people to get IDs and driver’s licenses is immensely helpful, and say they are supporting a new bill that would expand the program.
House Bill 1206 is set for its first committee hearing Wednesday in the House Local Government Committee. Continue reading
Tipton, Lamborn and Gardner all hosting telephone town halls Wednesday evening
DENVER – Three of Colorado’s Republican members of Congress are holding telephone town hall meetings Wednesday evening to talk with constituents.
Sen. Cory Gardner is holding his fourth in a series of town halls Wednesday evening at 7:10 p.m. Mountain Time. He is holding several throughout the year at different times of the day in order to connect with different groups of people, he says.
You can sign up to participate in the Gardner town hall by clicking here. You must sign up at least an hour before the start time to be able to pose a question, but anyone can listen in.
In the March 1 town hall, Gardner talked about marijuana, health care, and Russia, among other subjects.
Rep. Doug Lamborn will also host one Wednesday. His begins at 6:30 p.m. Mountain Time. Sign up for the town hall by clicking here.
And Rep. Scott Tipton will hold a town hall starting at 5:30 p.m. Mountain Time Wednesday. The town hall was originally slated for Tuesday, but was pushed back to Wednesday because of flight delays, Tipton said.
You can sign up for Tipton’s town hall here.
Many of Colorado’s congressional delegation is holding town hall meetings over at least the next month in order to hear from constituents on topics concerning them.
Colorado bill would prevent state from aiding feds in immigration roundups, registry
DENVER – The “sanctuary status” debate in Colorado could ramp up because of a bill introduced in the state Legislature this week that aims to create a distinction in state law that it won’t help federal authorities identify or track people on the basis of their race or immigration status, among other things.
House Bill 1230 is co-sponsored by two of the state’s Democratic leaders, Senate Minority Leader Lucia Guzman, D-Denver, and Rep. Daneya Esgar, the House Majority Caucus Chair. It also has co-sponsorship from Rep. Joseph Salazar, D-Adams, and Sen. Daniel Kagan, D-Arapahoe.
But 33 other Democratic House members have already signed on in support of the bill, as have eight other senators.
Reps. Tracy Kraft-Tharp, D-Jefferson, and southwestern Colorado Democrat Barbara McLachlan are the only Democratic House members not to have signed on to the bill.
Bill would change statute to prohibit helping feds in undocumented roundups, tracking
If passed, the bill would enact the “Ralph Carr Freedom Defense Act,” named after the governor of Colorado from 1939 to 1943 who famously took a stand against anti-Japanese sentiments amid the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II.
If passed through both chambers and signed by the governor, the bill would enact a series of changes to Colorado Revised Statutes that prohibits the state from helping federal authorities identify, track or detain people solely on the basis of their race, ethnicity, national origin, immigration status or religious affiliation.
The bill says that the state would have to know “the basis” for a request from federal authorities to divulge any of that information, and that the request be for “a legal and constitutional purpose.”
It would prohibit state agencies from helping federal authorities from “creating, maintaining, or updating a registry” that would track Colorado residents based on the aforementioned categories. The state would still cooperate with the U.S. Census Bureau.
The bill would also prohibit the state from helping put an electronic or physical “identifier” or tracking device on any person based on their race, ethnicity, national origin, immigration status or religious affiliation.
Finally, the bill defines “internment” as holding or imprisoning a person without probable cause or due process based on the categories for more than 48 hours, and says the state will not help federal authorities intern or arrest people on those bases.
The first part of the bill contains a legislative declaration that reads: “Colorado has been a beacon of hope against inhumane practices, such as the internment of communities. Colorado is called to lead again against the potential overreach of the federal government.”
It then goes into the history of Governor Carr’s opposition to the internment of Japanese-Americans, including the speech in which he said, “The Japanese are protected by the same Constitution that protects us. An American citizen of Japanese descent has the same rights as any other citizen…If you harm them, you must first harm me.”
“History has demonstrated that the demonization of communities leading to internment camps and the deprivation of human rights, constitutional rights, and civil rights are often rooted in the overreach of federal policies,” the declaration continues.
Sanctuary status for Colorado cities a gray area for most
So-called “sanctuary cities” have been scrutinized over the past several months after President Donald Trump promised during his campaign, and carried through with his promises in January, that he would strip federal funding from any self-professed sanctuary cities.
Denver, Aurora and Boulder have all said they won’t turn over suspected undocumented immigrants solely on the basis they are in the U.S. illegally, but Boulder is the only city with an official policy on its books.
Both Denver’s and Aurora’s mayor have maintained their cities are not sanctuary cities, however, despite Denver Mayor Michael Hancock making clear that Trump’s immigration orders targeting undocumented immigrants were out-of-line with city policy.
But other Colorado law enforcement authorities aren’t so keen on “sanctuary” policies.
Garfield County Sheriff Lou Vallario said in a news release on March 6 – the same day the new bill was introduced – that he believes people illegally in the country should be deported if they are committing crimes and that he opposes sanctuary policies. But he also added that his personal feelings “aren’t always compatible with what [he is] legally allowed to enforce under the ‘rule of law.’”
And the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution already provides protections against the detainment or arrest of people without probable cause no matter the legal status of a person.
But the bill, if passed, could protect people like Bernardo Medina, a U.S. citizen from Colorado who alleges he was unlawfully detained for three days by ICE in 2015 on the basis he was Hispanic – a time period that would violate the 48-hour internment portion of the bill.
The bill’s first hearing is set for March 16 in the House Judiciary Committee.