County commissioner pulls bill to free inmates wanted by ICE

County commissioner pulls bill to free inmates wanted by ICE
Jesús García, D-Chicago, withdrew his bill Wednesday. Bill Healy for WBEZ
County commissioner pulls bill to free inmates wanted by ICE
Jesús García, D-Chicago, withdrew his bill Wednesday. Bill Healy for WBEZ

County commissioner pulls bill to free inmates wanted by ICE

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Legislation that would have required Cook County to free some jail inmates wanted by immigration authorities is dead for now.

Commissioner Jesús García, D-Chicago, withdrew his bill at Wednesday’s County Board meeting. “We want to rethink it,” he said afterwards.

The measure would have made the county the nation’s largest jurisdiction to end blanket compliance with Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainers. Those are requests by the federal agency for local jails to keep some inmates 48 hours beyond what their criminal cases require.

García’s bill would have ended the county’s compliance unless the inmate had been convicted of a felony or two misdemeanors and unless the county got reimbursed.

Board President Toni Preckwinkle said she would back releasing some inmates wanted by ICE but wants to hear from State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez. “We hope to have a written opinion from the state’s attorney that will allow us to proceed,” she said after the board meeting.

A letter from Alvarez to Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart’s office back in 2009 said the jail “must comply with any ICE detainers.”

But ICE officials in recent months have said there is no legal requirement for jails to comply. Dart told WBEZ this month he planned to ask Alvarez for an updated opinion.

Alvarez’s office hasn’t answered WBEZ’s questions about whether she will revisit that opinion.