Immigrant advocates turn their backs on L.A. Board of Supervisors during controversial vote
Los Angeles County supervisors on Tuesday voted to unanimously to uphold a controversial program that allows local cops to screen inmates entering the jail system to determine their immigration status. During the city council meeting, some 60 immigrant advocates stood and turned their backs on county lawmakers for more than an hour in a silent protest, the L.A. Times reports.
Los Angeles becomes one of two counties in the state to retain the controversial inmate-screening program, known as 287(g). Supporters say the program helps identify criminals that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) missed, but advocates say the program unfairly puts undocumented immigrants with low-priority cases into deportation hearings.
Dozens of people spoke out against the 287(g) program, noted KPCC’s Leslie Berestein Rojas, including Blanca Perez, 34, who told the board “she ended up in ICE custody after being arrested for illegally selling ice cream bars outside her son’s school,” the L.A. Times reported.
Their protest was overridden by city supervisors Don Knabe, Michael Antonovich and Gloria Molina—the first Latina to be elected to the city council—who voted to extend the program. Supervisors Zev Yaroslavsky and Mark Ridley-Thomas abstained, according to the L.A. Times reports.