Organized Communities Against Deportations v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 8, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-02519
StatusUnknown

This text of Organized Communities Against Deportations v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Organized Communities Against Deportations v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Organized Communities Against Deportations v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, (N.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

ORGANIZED COMMUNITIES AGAINST DEPORTATIONS, IMMIGRANT DEFENSE PROJECT, and CENTER FOR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS, Plaintiffs, Case No. 21-CV-2519 Vv. UNITED STATES IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT, Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER In this action brought under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552, Plaintiffs Organized Communities Against Deportations, Immigrant Defense Project, and Center for Constitutional Rights, (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) sue United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) to compel ICE to produce records relating to its “Citizens Academy” programs. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment, [67], [75]. For the reasons explained below, the Court grants in part, and denies in part, the parties’ motions, without prejudice.

I. Factual Background! Plaintiffs are non-profit advocacy organizations dedicated to protecting immigrants’ rights, [80] 3-5. ICE is the principal investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security and is generally responsible for immigration enforcement. [69] at 2, § 4. The parties’ FOIA dispute concerns records relating to ICE’s “Citizens Academy” programs. Id. at 1, 4 1; [80] 4 1, 10. A, Citizen Academy Programs “Citizens Academy” programs are outreach programs designed to educate selected community leaders and members of the public on ICE’s mission and how the

agency enforces immigration and customs laws. Id. Individuals apply to participate in these programs and, if selected, undergo a background check. [82] § 1. Many Citizens Academy participants have had notable and unique job titles with prominent employers. Id. { 60. Each Citizens Academy program focuses on a designated component of ICE. In 2012, ICE launched its first roll-out of “Citizens Academy” programs, which gave participants an inside look into ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations (“HSI”) component. [80] §{] 9-10. ICE implemented HSI Citizens Academy programs in San Juan, New York, Tampa, and Los Angeles. Id. at § 9. In April 2019, ICE announced a “national roll-out’ of the program, and in July 2020, ICE publicized the first Enforcement and Removal (ERO) Citizens Academy, to take place in Chicago. Id. 9, 11. ICE planned to model the Chicago Academy upon

Court draws the facts from Defendant’s Local Rule 56.1 statement of material facts [69], Plaintiffs’ response to Defendant’s statement of material facts and statement of additional facts [77], Defendant’s response to Plaintiffs’ statement of facts [80], Defendant’s statement of additional facts [81], and Plaintiffs’ response to Defendant’s statement of additional facts, [82].

the HSI programs, such that it would provide participants with insight into ERO’s mission and activities.2 Id; [69] at 2, 4 9. B. Plaintiffs’ FOIA Request Shortly after ICE announced the Chicago Academy, on July 16, 2020, Plaintiffs sent ICE a FOIA request seeking “information related to ‘citizen’s academies’ operated by ICE.” [69] at 3, § 12; [80] § 1. Plaintiffs requested five categories of information: (1) training and orientation material for the Citizens Academy programs; (2) staffing records and data for all Citizens Academy programs since January 1, 2016; (2) records or data for ICE’s 2019-2020 national budget for all Citizens Academy programs; (4) records and data regarding program invitees and attendees; and (5) records listing the types of tactical equipment used by and/or demonstrated to Citizens Academy participants during any program since January 1, 2016. [1-1]. Although the request broadly sought this information for all “past, present, and future Citizens Academies,” Plaintiffs specifically requested records for the “upcoming Chicago, IL citizens academy run by ICE and/or any of its subcomponents,” “the ICE HSI citizens academy held in New York in 2017,” and “the HSI citizens academy held in Los Angeles, CA.” Id. After having received no documents and having exhausted the administrative process, Plaintiffs brought this lawsuit on May 11, 2021. [80] § 2; [1].

2 ERO is responsible for the arrest and removal of aliens, managing ICE’s detention operations, and providing medical and mental health care to people in ICE custody. [69] at 3, 914.

C. ICE’s FOIA Protocol & Searches ICE’s FOIA Director, Fernando Piniero, provided a declaration discussing the agency’s protocol for processing FOIA requests. See [69] at 12-28. According to Piniero, when a request comes in, ICE’s FOIA office identifies which program offices

are reasonably likely to possess responsive records and tasks those offices with conducting the requisite searches. Id. at 3, { 18-14. ICE staffs its program offices with a designated point-of-contact, who is responsible for communicating with the FOIA office. Id. at 15, § 15. Based on the point of contact’s experience, he or she will send the request, along with any instructions, to the employees or component offices within that program office who are reasonably likely to possess responsive records; those individuals or offices then search their file systems in locations reasonably likely to contain responsive records. Id. §/ 15-16. The determination of whether a particular location must be searched in

response to a FOIA request depends upon how a particular employee maintains his

or her files. Jd. § 17. ICE program offices and employees use various systems and methods to maintain records, including individual hard drives, the office’s shared drive (if the office uses one), DVDs, CDs, and USB devices. Jd. Employees store Microsoft Outlook email files in PST files on their email accounts, on their individual drives, or on their office’s shared drive. Jd. at 16, { 18. The ERO has its own approach to processing FOIA requests. In that office, a point of contact in ERO’s Information Disclosure Unit “reviews the substance of the request” and based upon the point of contact’s expertise and knowledge of the

program officers’ activities, determines whether the ERO’s Information Disclosure Unit can search for records, or “whether it is necessary to forward the FOIA request to other individuals or component offices to conduct searches of file systems that would be reasonably likely to have responsive records.” Jd. at 17-18 25. Once the searches are complete, the employees and component offices provide potentially responsive records to the point-of-contact, who then turns them over to the FOIA office. Id. at 15, § 16. The FOIA office then reviews the records for responsiveness and determines whether any FOIA exemptions apply. Id. Here, when ICE received Plaintiffs’ request, [CE’s FOIA office initially determined that its HSI and ERO components—the components that were the focus of its Citizens Academy programs—were the two components likely to possess responsive records, [69] at 8, § 18. Sixty-seven HSI officers conducted a comprehensive search of the component’s shared drive? and their sent and received emails. Id. at 20, {{ 36. This search revealed 5,500 pages of potentially responsive

3 HSI searched the component’s shared drive using the following search terms: “Citizens,” “Citizens Academy,” “Citizen’s Academy,” “Citizen Academy,” “Academy,” “ICE Citizen Academy,” “ICE Citizens Academy,” “HSI Citizens Academy,” “Citizens Academy Training,” “Citizens Academy Schedule,” “Use of Force,” “Citizen’s Academy (CA),” “2019 Class,” “Invitation.” “Participants,” “Staff,” “Training,” “Presentation,” “Agenda,” “Memo,” “Receipts,” “Procedures,” “Equipment,” and “CPI PSA.” [69] at 6, { 28.

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Organized Communities Against Deportations v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/organized-communities-against-deportations-v-immigration-and-customs-ilnd-2024.