Demonstrators gathered Tuesday outside the county administration building.
Paul Wellman

More than a dozen community members and members from the Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy (CAUSE) gathered outside of the county government building, chanting, “ICE has got to go!” in anticipation of the last agenda item at this Tuesday’s County Board of Supervisors meeting. The board was holding its first community forum mandated by the Transparent Review of Unjust Transfers and Holds (TRUTH) Act, which went into effect January 1, 2017. Under the TRUTH Act, legislative bodies in California are required to hold at least one forum a year if local law enforcement allowed ICE access to any individuals in their custody in the previous year. In 2017, ICE requested release date information for 526 inmates in Santa Barbara County Jail and picked up 351 individuals from Sheriff’s Office custody.

“The Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office does cooperate with ICE officials to the extent permitted by law,” Sheriff Bill Brown told the board. In 2017, cooperating with ICE took one of these five forms: (1) responding to an ICE hold, notification, or transfer request; (2) providing notification to ICE in advance of the public that an individual would be released at a certain date and time; (3) providing ICE non-publicly available information on release dates, home addresses, or work addresses; (4) allowing ICE to interview an individual in jail; (5) providing information on probation or parole check-ins.

Protesters gather outside the Santa Barbara County Building on Tuesday afternoon to protest any collaboration between the County and ICE.
Paul Wellman

As of January 1, 2018, ICE officials use the jail’s new records management system to search for an individual. Through the “Who Is in Custody” feature, anyone can search via first or last name and access the individuals release date. Community members are suspicious of the new records management system’s implementation date coinciding with the Values Act, which also came into effect January 1, 2018. The Values Act limits the types of crimes for which law enforcement can contact ICE.

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