In a major win for immigration advocates, the Las Vegas Metro Police Department is joining a swell of major cities refusing to comply with requests from federal officials to detain undocumented immigrants for longer than their jail terms.
“This change has nothing to do with me taking a stand on the immigration issue,” Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie said in a statement, according to NBC News. “It has more to do with a situation we’ve found ourselves in and this is the best thing to do until the feds figure it out.”
Las Vegas is the latest major city to defy Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, just one week after Los Angeles became the largest city in the country to challenge the practice.
Under a federal “Secured Communities” program, local law enforcement are asked to share any information on undocumented immigrants, including fingerprints, with federal officials. They’re are also asked to hold potentially deportable immigrants until federal agents arrive to take the inmates into custody. However, a growing number of municipalities are refusing to comply with federal agents after local police complained that the practice is deterring immigrant communities from reporting crimes out of fear of being flagged for deportation.









