Is Your County Collaborating with ICE?
BOAs are not the only way local law enforcement helps ICE find and deport immigrants. Community members can use the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) to uncover the extent of their county鈥檚 collaboration with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).聽
is a data-gathering, data research and data distribution organization at Syracuse University. Its Immigration Project is a multi-year effort to obtain very detailed information from the government, check it for accuracy and completeness, and then make it available in an understandable way.
TRAC lists the number of ICE detainers that each county in the country has complied with, organized by detention center:
Select the state you are researching in the left-most column, then the 鈥淐ounty-Facility Detainer Sent鈥 in the middle column. Note that there may be more than one facility in a given county, so add those up if you are looking to determine the total number of detainers complied with by a particular county. Then you can select 鈥淒etainer Refused鈥 in the right-most column. The last column will allow you to calculate the minimum amount of ICE detainers the county complied with. Note that the number is likely higher, as there is always a significant amount of detainers listed as 鈥淣ot Known鈥 with regard to whether they were complied with.
The Immigrant Legal Resource Center also has a useful that allows the public to locate detailed information on a county-by-county basis.