[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 40 (Monday, March 14, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1458-S1460]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I want to pay tribute to Sarah Root, a
young woman from Iowa who had a very bright future but was taken from
this Earth too soon.
Sarah was 21 years old and just graduated from Bellevue University
with perfect grades. In the words of her family, ``She was full of life
and ready to take on the world.''
According to a close friend of hers, Sarah was smart, outgoing, and
dedicated to her friends and family. She embodied the words that were
tattooed on her body: ``Live, laugh and love.''
The day Sarah graduated, she was struck by a drunk driver. That
driver was in the country illegally. The alleged drunk driver was Edwin
Mejia, and he had a blood alcohol content of .241, three times the
legal limit. The driver was charged with felony motor vehicle homicide
and operating a vehicle while intoxicated on February 3. Bail was set
at $50,000, but he was only required to put up 10 percent. So for a
mere $5,000, the drunk driver walked out of jail and into the shadows.
As Sarah's father said, after laying his daughter to rest, ``The cost
of a bond cost less than the funeral.''
Those are painful words to hear, but what is more frustrating is that
the driver should have never been released. When local law enforcement
apparently asked the Federal Government--specifically U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement--to take custody of the person, the Federal
Government declined. ICE refused to place a detainer on the driver. An
ICE spokesman stated that the agency did not lodge a detainer on the
man because
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his arrest for felony motor vehicle homicide ``did not meet ICE's
enforcement priorities.''
Now the Root family must face the consequences of the Federal
Government's inaction while grappling with their daughter's death. It
is difficult for the family to have closure since the man is nowhere to
be found. It is unknown if he is still in the United States or if he
has fled to his home country of Honduras, but this is not an isolated
incident. It is business as usual in the Obama administration. Because
of the administration's policies and carelessness, Sarah Root became
another victim. Once again, this case shows that there is a colossal
and systematic breakdown of immigration enforcement thanks to the Obama
administration's flawed policies and lack of commitment to the rule of
law.
Unfortunately, a talented young lady whose life was cut short, who
didn't have an opportunity to take on the world, is a story all too
common. Under President Obama's Priority Enforcement Program, a person
in the country illegally will only be detained or removed in a few
limited circumstances. Some say that nearly 90,000 undocumented
immigrants were released in 2015 thanks to this policy.
Secretary Jeh Johnson has claimed that only those who have laid down
roots and do not have serious crimes would not be subject to removal.
Yet their words don't match up with their actions. Local law
enforcement, such as those in Omaha, NE, have asked the Federal
Government to take custody of certain individuals, but the agency in
charge refuses. It hides behind their so-called priorities.
The President has a constitutional duty to ``take care that the laws
be faithfully executed.'' The Constitution does not say the President
shall make a list of which criminals would be punished or removed and
which criminals may go about their lives. The Obama administration may
not agree with the laws that Congress passes, but that has no bearing
on its responsibility to make sure the laws are faithfully carried out.
The administration claims it is well within its constitutional duties
under the doctrine of prosecutorial discretion. However, this
administration's approach of announcing its priorities and only
enforcing the laws on individuals who fall under its priorities is both
unusual and obviously an abuse of prosecutorial discretion.
This is unusual to prosecutorial discretion because prosecutors do
not usually announce their priorities or when they will exercise
prosecutorial discretion. A liberal law professor and immigration
attorney, Peter Margulies, explained that prosecutors strive ``to keep
prospective lawbreakers in the dark.'' He explains that if prosecutors'
discretion priorities are not kept secret, they ``would effectively
license the wrongdoing.''
He then went on to give an example in the case of a burglary. He
said:
When an admitted burglar is youthful and the burglar's
``take'' is relatively modest, judges may not wish to
sentence an offender to prison, and may look with favor on a
plea bargain that reflects this sentiment. However, it would
be difficult to imagine prosecutors soliciting applications
from known burglars for a ``burglar's holiday'' that would
guarantee a specific period of immunity.
In other words, it is as ridiculous to let people contemplating
illegally migrating to the United States know they will get a pass
under certain conditions as it would be to let people contemplating
burglary know they would be let off the hook if they met certain
qualifiers.
Consider the drunk driver who killed Sarah Root. What message does
this send to people who make a conscious decision to get behind the
wheel after drinking? What this case says is that drunk driving--unless
convicted--is not a serious enough offense to force removal
proceedings. This is moral hazard. Hence, this administration's
Priority Enforcement Program is creating a moral hazard and given
license to illegal activities.
Sarah Root is one of many victims in the past few weeks who died at
the hands of undocumented immigrants. In Louisville, KY, Chelsea Hogue
was put into a coma when Jose Aguilar, an undocumented person, hit her
while driving under the influence of alcohol. ICE issued a detainer and
did not take custody of Aguilar but released him a day later, again
because he had ``no prior significant misdemeanor or felony
conviction.''
Then there is Esmid Pedraza, who had been transferred to ICE in
August of 2013 after serving time for driving under the influence.
However, he was let go on bond because of limited detention space. This
is what ICE said at that particular time:
Due to limited availability of detention space, ICE
prioritizes the use of its immigration detention beds for
convicted felons, known gang members, and other individuals
whose conviction records indicate they pose a likely threat
to public safety.
This is ironic, given that the administration has failed to live up
to the mandated detention bed limit that Congress sets every year.
Just a little over 2 years after his drunk driving offense, Pedraza
was charged with the murder of his girlfriend Stacey Aguilar. Then on
March 8, an individual illegally present in the United States allegedly
murdered five people in Kansas and Missouri. The suspect entered the
country in 1993, committed a series of crimes, and was removed from the
United States in 2004. He attempted to illegally enter again the same
month but was given ``voluntary return.'' However, he returned at some
point and continued his criminal ways. The suspect had been arrested
and charged with numerous crimes, including communicating a threat with
intent to terrorize; battery of a spouse; several driving without a
license offenses; a subsequent felony conviction for communicating a
threat with intent to terrorize, reportedly based on his threat to kill
his wife with a rifle, for which he was sentenced to incarceration for
2 years; two arrests for driving under the influence, which produced
one conviction; and a conviction for domestic battery.
On at least two occasions, ICE was notified of the suspect but, for
various reasons, did not take custody of that person. That was a major
failure between the Feds and local law enforcement.
People are illegally entering the country, being removed, entering
again, and committing more crimes. Illegal reentries are happening
because there are no consequences. That is what happened in Kate
Steinle's death, and that is why we need to move to what is called
Kate's Law. That bill would deter people from illegally reentering by
enhancing penalties and establishing new mandatory minimum sentences
for certain individuals with previous felony convictions.
The Obama administration cannot continue to turn a blind eye to
sanctuary communities and ignore those who have broken our laws by
illegally crossing the border time and again.
How many more people have to die? How many more women--like Kate
Steinle, Sarah Root, Chelsea Hogue, and Stacey Aguilar--are going to be
taken from their families and friends? The parents of these young women
are grieving today, yet their stories fall on deaf ears at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue.
Things have to change. The President must rethink his policies and
must find a way to ensure that criminal immigrants are taken off the
streets. The Obama administration should try enforcing the law, instead
of its priorities, for the sake of the American people.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Lankford). The Senator from New Jersey.
(The remarks of Mr. Menendez pertaining to the introduction of S.
2675 are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced
Bills and Joint Resolutions.'')
Mr. MENENDEZ. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, my colleague has brought to our attention
a very crucial issue. We need to be there for each other. That is what
makes America great--when we are there for each other.
(The remarks of Mrs. Boxer pertaining to the introduction of S. 2674
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
Mrs. BOXER. I yield the floor.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
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Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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