Senate intern, a sex offender, faces deportation
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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen. Robert Menendez employed as an unpaid
intern in his Senate office an illegal immigrant who was a registered
sex offender, now under arrest by immigration authorities, The
Associated Press has learned. The Homeland Security Department
instructed federal agents not to arrest him until after Election Day, a
U.S. official involved in the case told the AP.
A
Homeland Security spokesman, Peter Boogaard, said Wednesday that it was
"categorically false" that the department delayed the arrest of Luis
Abrahan Sanchez Zavaleta, 18, until after the election.
Sanchez,
an immigrant from Peru, was arrested by Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agents in front of his home in New Jersey on Dec. 6, two
federal officials said. Sanchez, who entered the country on a
now-expired visitor visa from Peru, is facing deportation and remains in
custody. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to discuss details of Sanchez's immigration case.
Boogaard
said in a statement that ICE followed standard procedures working with
local prosecutors before taking what he described as appropriate
enforcement action.
Menendez, D-N.J., who
advocates aggressively for pro-immigration policies, was re-elected in
November with 58 percent of the vote. He said his staff was notified
about the case Monday, he personally learned about the case from AP's
reporting and knew nothing about whether DHS delayed the arrest. The
senator said his staff asks interns whether they are in the country
legally but cannot check to be sure.
"We
certainly wouldn't have known through any background checks since he is a
minor about any sex offender status," Menendez said in an interview
Wednesday with MSNBC. "Once it came to our attention, our New Jersey
staff director let the young man go."
Online jail records did not indicate whether Sanchez has an attorney. Sanchez declined to be interviewed from jail.
The
prosecutor's office in Hudson County, N.J., said Sanchez was found to
have violated the law in 2010 and subsequently required to register as a
sex offender. The exact charge was unclear because Sanchez was
prosecuted as a juvenile and those court records are not publicly
accessible. The prosecutor's office confirmed to AP that Sanchez
registered as a sex offender, although his name does not appear on the
public registry. The acting county prosecutor, Gaetano Gregory, is a
Republican.
Authorities in Hudson County
notified ICE agents in early October that they suspected Sanchez was an
illegal immigrant who was a registered sex offender and who may be
eligible to be deported. ICE agents in New Jersey notified superiors at
the Homeland Security Department because they considered it a
potentially high profile arrest, and DHS instructed them not to arrest
Sanchez until after the November election, one U.S. official told the
AP. ICE officials complained that the delay was inappropriate, but DHS
directed them several times not to act, the official said.
It was not immediately clear why federal immigration authorities would not have been notified sooner about Sanchez's status.
During
discussions about when and where to arrest Sanchez, the U.S. reviewed
Sanchez's application for permission to stay in the country as part of
President Barack Obama's policy to allow up to 1.7 million young illegal
immigrants avoid deportation and get permission to work for up to two
years. As a sex offender, he would not have been eligible. Citizenship
and Immigration Services, which oversees the program known as Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals, notified Sanchez of that shortly before
his arrest, one official said.
Menendez said
the arrest spoke to the need for comprehensive immigration reform that
brings illegal immigrants out of the shadows.
"It
does speak volumes about why we need comprehensive immigration reform,"
the senator said. "I can't know who is here to pursue the American
dream versus who is here to do it damage if I cannot get people to come
forth out of the shadows, go through criminal background checks and then
determine who is here to pursue the dream and make sure that those who
are here and have criminal backgrounds ultimately get deported."
During
the final weeks of President George W. Bush's administration, ICE was
criticized for delaying the arrest of President Barack Obama's aunt, who
had ignored an immigration judge's order to leave the country several
years earlier after her asylum claim was denied. She subsequently won
the right to stay in the United States after an earlier deportation
order, and there was no evidence of involvement by the White House.
In
that case, the Homeland Security Department had imposed an unusual
directive days before the 2008 election requiring high-level approval
before federal agents nationwide could arrest fugitive immigrants
including Zeituni Onyango, the half-sister of Obama's late father. The
directive from ICE expressed concerns about "negative media or
congressional interest," according to a copy of that directive obtained
by AP. The department lifted the immigration order weeks later.
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