Updated Monday, Aug. 19, 2019

On Thursday, Aug. 15, the Chaldean Community Foundation, Congressman Andy Levin, and Congresswoman Brenda L. Lawrence hosted a vigil for Jimmy Aldaoud, the 41-year-old Detroit man and ACLU client who was deported to Iraq.

The following is a statement ACLU of Michigan Senior Staff Attorney Miriam Aukerman read to the community and loved ones of Jimmy Aldaoud at his vigil:  

We come together tonight to remember Jimmy. And to grieve. We grieve for a man who loved and was loved by his family. We grieve for a man with a big heart who wanted to help others.

We spoke to Jimmy after he’d been deported, not long before his death, and he said he wanted to do everything he could to help others. He wanted us to share his story so that no one else would suffer as he has. He thought of others who are  at risk – many of you who are here tonight – even while he was struggling on the streets of Baghdad. That was the kind of man he was.  A man with big heart and big smile.

Our grief is so much sharper, his family’s loss so much more painful because we know that Jimmy’s death was utterly senseless. Jimmy did not need to die. Jimmy should not have died. He died ONLY because ICE condemned him to die when ICE decided to deport him to Iraq, a country where he had never been. ICE condemned him to die because he wasn’t born in America.

Your place of birth should not determine whether you live or die. The loss of Jimmy is all the more painful because it was entirely preventable. He would be alive today if he had not been deported. And we all knew, anyone who knew Jimmy knew, that he would not survive in Iraq.

So we, the ACLU and the Hamama legal team, grieve with Jimmy’s family today. Nothing we can do now that will restore Jimmy to his family. But we will do everything we can to prevent other families from grieving in the way that Jimmy’s family grieves tonight. We will keep fighting.

And Jimmy, with his big heart, his willingness to share his story, and his tragic struggle to survive, has helped us in that fight, because he has opened the eyes of the world to what is at stake – life or death. He has shown the world how cruel and wrong these deportations are.

Date

Monday, August 19, 2019 - 10:15am

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Vigil for Jimmy Aldaoud

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The American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan (ACLU) and the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC) sent letters today to nine county sheriffs, prosecutors, and two police chiefs, urging that they stop detaining people in jails at the request of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) without a court order. The ACLU and MIRC also submitted requests to these same law enforcement agencies for detainer records, pursuant to the Michigan Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). These detentions are unconstitutional and erode trust in local law enforcement, ultimately making communities less safe.

Immigration detainers, also referred to as ICE holds, are non-mandatory ICE requests to police agencies to keep a person in custody after they would otherwise be released. Typically, the request is for an additional 48 hours. Sheriff and police departments are not legally required to honor ICE holds, but by doing so are potentially violating the person’s Fourth Amendment rights to reasonable search and seizure.

“ICE is not above the law,” said Abril Valdes, immigrant rights attorney for the ACLU of Michigan. “Detainer requests do not establish a person’s citizenship status, and they are not warrants signed by a judge. These detentions are illegal and predatory.”

As of today, more than 50 jurisdictions outside of Michigan abandoned the practice of honoring ICE detainer requests. When local law enforcement agencies aid ICE’s federal immigration efforts without judicial oversight, ordinary police work becomes more complex, straining trust between residents and officers. According to recent studies, prosecutors, judges, and police officers reported that increased national immigration enforcement activity makes it more difficult to protect local communities from crime, in part because crime reporting plummets. This results in communities being less safe.

“Every person in this country is entitled to the rights of the Constitution,” said Ruby Robinson, co-managing attorney of the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center. “Local police must work to keep all Michigan communities safe – not put their time and resources into immigration efforts beyond their jurisdiction that instill fear and destroy trust.”

In January, the Kent County Sheriff's Department announced the end of their ICE-hold policy following the arrest and detention of Jilmar Ramos-Gomez. “The additional requirement of an independent judicial review will increase the level of oversight of an ICE detention request in Kent County, for the justice system is built on a balance of authority and oversight," said Michelle LaJoye-Young, Kent County Sheriff, at a January press conference. “For that reason, we advocate for the requirement of all ICE detention requests to be subject to judicial review at a national level.” 

The ACLU and MIRC filed FOIA requests with each of the 11 jurisdictions that received letters, asking for detainer policies and records beginning from Jan. 1, 2018.

The letter was sent to law enforcement agencies within the following counties: Allegan County; Eaton County; Macomb County; Monroe County; Muskegon County; Oakland County; Oceana County; Ottawa County; and Saint Clair County.

The letter was also sent to the police chiefs of Dearborn and Detroit Police Departments.

Pictured: Sheriff Michelle LaJoye-Young speaking about the end of Kent County's ICE-hold policy, January 18 2019. Source: MLive on YouTube.

Date

Thursday, August 8, 2019 - 11:30am

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After citizen detained, Kent County sheriff changes ICE-hold policy

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We know that trans people belong. Abortion is healthcare. No human is illegal. And everybody deserves a second chance.

The fight is on for our democracy and together we will win.

This is our movement. Our moment.

Please join us on Friday, November 1 at the Henry Ford Museum for the ACLU of Michigan 2019 Annual Dinner.

The RSVP deadline is October 20. *To be added to the ticket wait list, please contact: dinner@aclumich.org or (313) 578-6837*

Keynote Speaker

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II
A riveting warrior for social justice, Rev. Dr. Barber calls on all of us to be the “moral defibrillators of our time.” His Poor People’s Campaign has inspired thousands across the U.S. to come together in support of the rights of immigrants, LGBTQ people, and women; against mass incarceration and for voting rights; and for a “revolution of values,” in which no one is left behind. Rev. Dr. Barber is also a contributing op-ed writer for the New York Times and the Washington Post, and is a 2018 MacArthur Fellow.

2019 Honorees

Lamonte Card
The week he was released from prison after 25 years, Lamonte joined the ACLU to fight for voting reform in the Promote the Vote campaign. Lamonte’s extraordinary commitment to civic engagement is a model for us all.

Vicki Moore
Vicki Moore of Flint and Saginaw has been a champion for abortion access since before Roe v. Wade. She is a courageous fighter for reproductive freedom in Michigan, providing advocacy and abortion care for women in mid-Michigan for decades despite relentless attacks.

 

Event Date

Friday, November 1, 2019 - 6:30pm

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Agenda

6:30 p.m.
Cocktail Reception
7:30 p.m.
Dinner and Program

Venue

Henry Ford Museum

Address

20900 Oakwood Blvd.
Dearborn, MI 48124
United States

Phone

(313) 578 6837

E-mail address

dinner@aclumich.org

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Friday, November 1, 2019 - 6:30pm

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