Hennepin County Sheriff David Hutchinson is making it harder for federal officials to detain inmates for immigration issues in a move he hopes will make new residents from other countries more comfortable reporting crime.
The most recent change came in June when the sheriff issued a directive to greatly limit the use of immigration detainer warrants to hold people in jail who may otherwise be released. The warrants, used by the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), can no longer cause people to be held in jail unless authorities take the added step of getting a judge's approval.
The sheriff also removed the ICE office at the jail and has stopped alerting the agency when undocumented people will be released.
"We haven't received any blowback from ICE," Hutchinson said. "We treat them like any other agency. They understand we have to do our jobs and they have to do their jobs."
A spokesman for ICE declined to comment.
Hutchinson swept into office in 2019 after taking strong stances on immigration issues during his campaign, but his new approach in dealing with immigration issues is raising concern among those who believe local sheriffs and police departments need to be in close cooperation with federal agencies.
"It's still against the law to be in this country illegally," said state Sen. Bill Ingebrigtsen, a Republican from Alexandria and former Douglas County sheriff. "We have some very tough customers that are coming in. A decision to not comply with an order or refuse to detain somebody could hinder public safety."
The changes at the jail sends a message to the immigrant community that they should feel comfortable calling police if they are a crime victim and not fear deportation for reporting it, Hutchinson said.