[image: The New York Times] <http://www.nytimes.com/>
[image: Printer Friendly Format Sponsored
By]<http://www.nytimes.com/adx/bin/adx_click.html?type=goto&page=www.nytimes.com/printer-friendly&pos=Position1&sn2=336c557e/4f3dd5d2&sn1=48816025/651079b4&camp=foxsearch2009_emailtools_1011070e_nyt5&ad=SDM_120x60_pritnerfriendly_win&goto=http://www.foxsearchlight.com/slumdogmillionaire>

------------------------------
February 6, 2009
EDITORIAL
Arpaio's America

It has come to this: In Phoenix on Wednesday, more than 200 men in shackles
and prison stripes were marched under armed guard past a gantlet of TV
cameras to a tent prison encircled by an electric fence. They were inmates
being sent to await deportation in a new immigrant detention camp minutes
from the center of America's fifth-largest city.

The judge, jury and exhibitioner of this degrading spectacle was the
Maricopa County sheriff, Joe Arpaio, the publicity-obsessed star of a Fox
reality show and the self-appointed scourge of illegal immigrants. Though he
frequently and proudly insists that he answers to no one, except at election
time, the sheriff is not an isolated rogue. As a participant in the federal
policing program called 287(g), he is an official partner of the United
States government in its warped crackdown on illegal immigration.

The immigration enforcement regime left by the Bush Administration is out of
control. It is up to President Obama and the new secretary of homeland
security, Janet Napolitano, to rein it in and clean it up. This applies not
just to off-the-rails deputies like Sheriff Arpaio, but to the federal
enforcement agencies themselves.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol have been shown in
recent news accounts to be botching their jobs. Border Patrol agents in
California have accused supervisors of setting arrest quotas for
undocumented immigrants, and a recent Migration Policy Institute study
showed that a much-touted campaign of raids against criminal fugitives was a
failure. It netted mostly the maids and laborers who are no reasonable
person's idea of a national threat.

The burden of action is particularly high on Ms. Napolitano, who as
Arizona's governor handled Sheriff Arpaio with a gingerly caution that
looked to some of his critics and victims as calculated and timid.

Ms. Napolitano, who is known as a serious and moderate voice on immigration,
recently directed her agency to review its enforcement efforts, including
looking at ways to expand the 287(g) program. Sheriff Arpaio is a powerful
argument for doing just the opposite.

Now that she has left Arizona politics behind, Ms. Napolitano is free to
prove this is not Arpaio's America, where the mob rules and immigrants are
subject to ritual humiliation. The country should expect no less.


-- 
Shaun
773.828.4336
917.755.7409

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Internet group address: http://groups.google.com/group/ChicagoMayDay

To send e-mail: [email protected]

To unsuscribe: [email protected]
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to