Immigrant crime data bill wins approval

immigrant-crime-data-bill-wins-approval

House Bill 202 would provide to the public aggregate statistics on crimes committed by people in state prisons who are in the country illegally. Monday afternoon, the state House Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee approved the bill on a 8-2 vote.

State Rep. Jesse Petrea, R-Savannah, is the lead sponsor of the bill and said it only pertains to state prisons — not local jails.

“The subset of inmates in this state who are illegally here are about 3 percent,” Petrea said. “So, this is a smaller subset. However, it is an impactful subset, because when you think about the fact that if indeed our federal government, our federally elected officials from both parties, if they were doing their job and dealing with the very important issue of immigration in this country, and making sure we have a legal and vigorous immigration system, if they were doing that job, then none of those crimes, perhaps, would have occurred.

“And so I had received this information at the request of the (state Department of Corrections) a couple of years ago, and discovered that I could get it, but it wasn’t available to the public.”

The aggregate data would include numbers on those under detainers from U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, offenses committed and the home countries of the inmates “who are not United States citizens and who are confined under the authority of the department and, with regard to the total population in confinement, the percentage that comprises persons who are not citizens of the United States.”

The first report would go out Oct. 1, and then every 90 days thereafter.

“This is 1,505 currently in Georgia corrections, and well over 1,100 of these are violent and sex offenses,” Petrea said. “These are heinous crimes, folks. And the degree to which this is a problem, the people need to be aware of.”

The language of the committee substitute of the bill approved Monday doesn’t make it clear, but from discussion in committee, the statistics wouldn’t be on all unauthorized immigrants in state prisons, but on ones with ICE detainers — Petrea said there are an estimated 2,100 people in state prisons believed to be unauthorized but a few hundred don’t have ICE detainers.

Naomi Tsu, an attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center who specializes in immigration law in the Deep South, told the committee that what happens with an ICE detainer is that the agency indicates it’s interested in finding out the release date of that inmate so the agency can pick them up.

“It’s basically like filing an indictment, but in the immigration system,” Tsu said. “So, it’s not proof of anything, it’s allegations of something. A detainer will often be filed against someone who had legal status. So, one of the things Congress has done is to say you can lose your privilege of being here if you are an immigrant, if you entered — I’m not an immigrant, but I’m the child of immigrants, and if any of my family members had committed a really heinous crime like the ones on this list, they would’ve lost their immigration status. Until they became citizens, at which point you’re just subject to the same protections as all citizens.

“Congress strips people’s immigration status, and the way ICE goes about doing that — because it’s not an automatic process, there’s an immigration court involved, etc. — and so, ICE files a detainer against someone who might have been here completely legally, in order to try to strip that status so they can be deported.”

Various speakers swung both ways on directions they believed the bill should go — some advocated for explicit comparisons to the percentages of crimes committed by inmates in the general population, so as to provide context and not needlessly demonize immigrant communities. Others asked for the bill to cover everyone in prison believed to be unauthorized, along with those in local jails throughout the state.

The bill now moves on to the House Rules Committee.

Source: https://thebrunswicknews.com/news/local_news/immigrant-crime-data-bill-wins-approval/article_0e06fdd6-74ba-5b3a-b3bf-b5fc65921839.html

Former police officer pleads guilty to violating oath

former-police-officer-pleads-guilty-to-violating-oath

A former Darien police lieutenant who was under felony indictment in the theft of drugs pleaded guilty recently to a single misdemeanor count of violating his oath of office as a public officer, court records show.

Nicholas “Nick” O. Roundtree entered his plea about two weeks ago before Superior Court Judge Glenn A. Cheney. The judge sentenced Roundtree to three years probation and ordered him to pay a $1,000 fine, court records show.

The other charges of theft by conversion, theft by taking and another count of violation of an oath by a public officer were dismissed, records show.

Because Cheney sentenced Roundtree under the first offender statute, his criminal record will be cleared once he completes his probation without re-offending.

Roundtree was an investigator with the Darien Police Department until late 2014 when the Georgia Bureau of Investigation completed a probe of the suspected disappearance of drugs from the department’s evidence room. The GBI estimated that $1,500 in narcotics had been removed from the evidence room over a four-year period and Roundtree was subsequently charged with theft by taking. Darien Police Chief Donnie Howard, who had requested the GBI probe, placed Roundtree on administrative leave. Soon after, Roundtree, who was the custodian of evidence, resigned from the force.

A grand jury later indicted Roundtree on two counts each of theft and violating his oath of office, records show.

Officials could not say where Roundtree is working now, but he had worked as a car salesman in Brunswick after his resignation.

Roundtree was charged not long after his investigation of a middle school band director resulted in child molestation charges.

James Raymond Clark Jr. lived in Darien but taught music at Jane Macon Middle School in Glynn County. Roundtree began investigating Clark after an Atlanta man accused Clark of molesting him in 2000 and 2001 when he was 12 and 13 years old. Because of the statute of limitations, no charges could be filed on those allegations.

Clark was charged in March 2014 with aggravated child molestation and criminal intent to commit statutory rape. As soon as he was confronted by officers, Clark resigned and wrote a letter saying he would not return to the school.

Just over a year after his arrest, Clark pleaded guilty to enticing a child for indecent purposes and was sentenced to 20 years probation and ordered to register as a sex offender.

The GBI registry shows Clark is still living in Darien.

Source: https://thebrunswicknews.com/news/local_news/former-police-officer-pleads-guilty-to-violating-oath/article_9455262d-d4d5-5d88-8680-d5424045c743.html