Oakland Police May Have Broken the Law by Denying Immigrants' Witness Protection Visa Applications
Oakland police have launched an internal investigation to determine whether immigrants who had been victims of a crime were illegally denied visas by the department.
“We have not been fully and squarely within the law,” OPD Chief Anne Kirkpatrick said in a statement this week. “We want our community to know if they are a victim of a crime they can come to us.”
In a notice shared on the OPD website, the department encouraged anyone who’s been rejected for a U-Visa—a form of witness protection afforded to immigrant victims of certain types of crimes who cooperate with police investigations—to resubmit their paperwork. While the federal government has final approval over who is granted a U-Visa, local police departments must green light all applications before Citizenship and Immigration Services makes their ruling. The OPD announcement came shortly after a public defender produced evidence in two cases where applicants were wrongly denied visas.