TRUMP ADMIN. NOW TARGETING HAITIANS
AP Exclusive:
US looks for evidence of crimes by Haitians
Immigration Service Reportedly Launches Unorthodox Quest For Evidence Of Crimes
Alicia A. Caldwell - May 9, 2017
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is taking the unusual step
of hunting for evidence of crimes committed by Haitian immigrants as it
decides whether to allow them to continue participating in a
humanitarian program that has shielded tens of thousands from
deportation since an earthquake destroyed much of their country.
The inquiries into the community’s criminal history were made in
internal U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services emails obtained by
The Associated Press. They show the agency’s newly appointed policy
chief also wanted to know how many of the roughly 50,000 Haitians
enrolled in the Temporary Protected Status program were taking advantage
of public benefits, which they are not eligible to receive.
The emails don’t make clear if Haitian misdeeds will be used to
determine whether they can remain in the United States. The program is
intended to help people from places beset by war or disasters and,
normally, the decision to extend it depends on whether conditions in the
immigrants’ home country have improved enough for them to return. But
emails suggest Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, who will make the
decision, is looking at other criteria.
“I do want to alert you ... the secretary is going to be sending a
request to us to be more responsive,” Kathy Nuebel Kovarik, the USCIS
head of policy and strategy, wrote on April 27. Addressing the inability
of agency employees to gather the requested information about
wrongdoing, she said: “I know some of it is not captured, but we’ll have
to figure out a way to squeeze more data out of our systems.”
The request for criminal data for an entire community is unorthodox.
The law doesn’t specify it should be a consideration for Temporary
Protected Status and the government has never said it would use criminal
rates in deciding if a country’s citizens should be allowed to stay
under this program. Introducing new criteria is likely to cause
consternation among law-abiding Haitians who may feel they are being
penalized for the wrongdoing of their compatriots.
But the request fits in with President Donald Trump’s broader,
tough-on-immigration focus that is a core demand of his political
supporters. He has enhanced efforts to arrest people living illegally in
the United States and sought, unsuccessfully so far, to suspend refugee
arrivals and temporarily block visitors from seven Muslim-majority
countries. He has accused those in the U.S. illegally of fueling
criminality in the U.S.
It is unclear if the agency is asking such questions about other
recipients of the temporary protection, including immigrants from
Honduras and El Salvador.
The Homeland Security Department said Kelly has not made a final
decision about Temporary Protected Status for Haiti and declined to
comment on the process.
Temporary Protected Status is intended to be just that, temporary.
The Obama administration included Haiti in the program shortly after the
January 2010 earthquake that killed as many as 300,000 people and
devastated schools, hospitals, homes and even entire neighborhoods.
Since then, Haitians have been eligible to stay regardless of how they
entered the United States — legally or illegally — as long as they were
residing in the U.S. before Jan. 12, 2011.
Eligibility for Haitians has been extended several times and is set
to expire July 22. The Trump administration must decide by May 23 so
that it can provide 60 days’ notice about its plans.
USCIS’ acting director has recommended letting the program expire. In
an April 10 memo first reported by USA Today, James McCament said Haiti
is no longer in crisis despite its poverty and political instability.
However, he wants to allow the Haitians to stay until January so they
have time to make arrangements to voluntarily leave. If they don’t
depart the U.S. by then, the government could move to deport them.
Still, Homeland Security’s Kelly has the final word.
The emails inquiring about misdeeds were sent from April 7 to May 1.
In her first week on the job, Kovarik, the policy chief, asked
officials how often Haitians with temporary status have been convicted
of “crimes of any kind,” and how many have taken advantage of public
benefits. She asked for that information in four separate emails. She
also asked how much money Haitians have sent home and how often they’ve
traveled back to Haiti. Left unsaid is that frequent travel could
suggest improved conditions.
“Please dig for any stories (successful or otherwise) that would show
how things are in Haiti - i.e. rebuilding stories, work of nonprofits,
how the U.S. is helping certain industries,” Kovarik wrote on April 28.
“We should also find any reports of criminal activity by any individual
with TPS. Even though it’s only a snapshot and not representative of the
entire situation, we need more than ‘Haiti is really poor’ stories.”
The emails were largely directed to non-political employees. They
responded by saying much of the data were not available or were
difficult to find in government records systems.
Criminal fingerprint records, for instance, don’t generally indicate
if a suspect has Temporary Protected Status. And the employees said the
public benefits request was almost impossible to answer because TPS
participants aren’t eligible for most.
About the only firm information Kovarik’s queries turned up,
according to the emails, is that Haiti benefited from about $1.3 billion
in remittances from the United States in 2015. Officials said they
could only guess how much came from the temporarily protected group,
which comprise only a fraction of the estimated 954,000-strong Haitian
diaspora in the United States.
Maria Odom, a former Citizenship and Immigration Services ombudsman
who served during the Obama administration, said she was puzzled by the
inquiries about criminal activities. She said the government already
checks criminal histories of applicants and denies protections to those
who’ve broken U.S. laws.
“You should not craft a humanitarian policy based on the few,” Odom said.
___Follow Alicia A. Caldwell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/acaldwellap
https://apnews.com/740ed5b40ce84bb398c82c48884be616