Minnesota county sheriffs are caught between growing demands from the Trump administration to help with deportation efforts and state court rulings that emphasize their limited role in federal immigration enforcement.
Richard Hodsdon, attorney for the Minnesota Sheriffs' Association, said county sheriffs may want to help U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but they only have jurisdiction to enforce state and local laws. Federal immigration statutes, which are typically civil matters, are outside their legal authority.
Sheriffs can share information with federal officials, but, without a warrant, local jails legally cannot comply with “ICE detainers,” to hold people suspected of being in the country illegally.
“They are not the same as a court order; they are a request issued by an administrative agency,” Hodsdon said.
He noted that sheriffs in Anoka and Nobles counties were successfully sued for holding people beyond their judicial authority.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota brought those court cases after local law enforcement agencies violated residents' rights because they were suspected of being in the United States without proper authorization, said Julio Zelaya, advocacy director for the Minnesota ACLU.
“Our state constitution doesn’t allow for the enforcement of federal immigration laws,” Zelaya said. “We don’t want our state law enforcement holding people beyond what they otherwise have the power to do.”
Minnesota sheriffs have been advised of the legal jeopardy they could face for honoring immigration detainers' absent legal authorization, Hodsdon said. The exception is the few counties that already contract with ICE to hold people.