New York mayor considers plan to reopen Ice office at Rikers Island jail

New York mayor considers plan to reopen Ice office at Rikers Island jail
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New York mayor considers plan to reopen Ice office at Rikers Island jail
Author: Emily Swanson in New York
Published: Feb, 13 2025 13:00

Eric Adams weighs closer involvement with federal agency in sign of beleaguered mayor’s warm alliance with Trump. In a sign of increasing cooperation with Donald Trump’s anti-immigration plans, New York City’s Democratic mayor, Eric Adams, is weighing whether to allow the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (Ice) to re-establish an office at the city’s notorious Rikers Island jail.

 [a person holds a sign that reads ‘immigrants make America great’]
Image Credit: the Guardian [a person holds a sign that reads ‘immigrants make America great’]

An Ice office there closed in 2015 under sanctuary laws that severely limit the city’s involvement with federal immigration enforcement. Having a facility at the jail would make it easier for federal agents to deport people held there before they can be released on to the streets. In addition, Adams has enraged immigration advocates by issuing guidance to all city agencies making it easier for Ice officers to go into what had previously been designated as sensitive locations, such as schools, migrant shelters, churches and hospitals.

 [men in suits talk with each other]
Image Credit: the Guardian [men in suits talk with each other]

Under current law, signed by the former mayor Bill de Blasio, New York City police and corrections officers do not usually cooperate with Ice enforcement, and Ice is prohibited from many locations except when they have a warrant signed by a judge that alleges a serious crime has been committed. “I cannot have any city employee that will get in the way of [Ice] carrying out their job as a federal authority. That would be irresponsible for me,” Adams said last Sunday in an interview on the WABC Latino-issues program Tiempo.

Whether Adams has executive authority to reopen an Ice facility at Rikers remains unclear, but he discussed the possibility in a 12 December meeting with Tom Homan, the Trump administration’s “border czar”, who told the New York Post at the time that the mayor has done “a complete 180” on immigration policy in terms of being willing to cooperate with the federal government. Adams went out of his way to meet Trump after the election and establish a warm relationship with the Republican now president and his team, in an unlikely alliance.

The mayor has been struggling amid a sprawling federal corruption investigation that has cost him key lieutenants and resulted in the mayor himself being indicted last September, accused of accepting bribes and illegal campaign contributions. On Monday, the US Department of Justice ordered federal prosecutors to drop the criminal charges against Adams, in a stunning intervention supposedly because it was restricting him from immigration enforcement.

Meanwhile, a recently leaked Adams memo to all city agencies, including those overseeing schools, hospitals and shelters, appeared to allow Ice officers to enter previously restricted premises even without a warrant if staffers at the place being raided “reasonably feel threatened or fear for [their] safety or the safety of others”. The memo, first reported by the local outlet Hell Gate, provoked fears that Ice agents will more readily use threatening behavior in order to gain warrantless access.

The Adams administration later issued updated guidelines that align better with sanctuary laws and removed the phrase about staffers fearing for their safety. It also advised staffers to call general counsel, take photos of the officer’s ID and warrant and avoid altercations with agents. “We will not put a frontline worker in harm’s way and subject to arrest by federal officers simply by doing their job,” said the city’s corporation counsel, Muriel Goode-Trufant, who issued the video and flowchart with new guidelines that she said apply to many city agencies.

Advocates say Adams’s belated affirmation of sanctuary laws seems weak at best. Murad Awawdeh, director of the New York Immigration Coalition, issued a statement that Adams’s “dangerous” policy “will further force families into the shadows and leave countless New Yorkers vulnerable to detention and deportation simply for accessing basic services”. He called on Adams to reverse the policy or face a lawsuit.

As some New Yorkers live in fear after recent Ice raids that have reportedly scooped up at least 100 residents, Adams has insisted that all New Yorkers should continue sending kids to school and using city services when needed. “You know, we’re hearing over and over rumors of Ice raiding schools – didn’t happen,” he told WABC. “We’re hearing over and over again, Ice raiding shelters – didn’t happen,” he said. He accused the media of “feeding hysteria”.

Ice re-establishing a presence at Rikers is a risk to due process, advocates say. Adams has repeatedly talked of changing laws that protect migrants, cooperating more closely with Ice and expelling criminal migrants. But it is far from clear how many convicted criminals have been arrested so far during high-profile Ice raids. And, at Rikers Island, the vast majority of those held at the jail have not been convicted of their charges. In August 2023, 87% of its approximately 6,000 detainees were there pre-trial, according to a city comptroller report.

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