Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
405-521-5774
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For Immediate Release:
October 4, 2006
Senator Daisy Lawler
Senate Task Force on Illegal Immigration
Discusses Prison Population, Law Enforcement
The Senate Task Force on Illegal
Immigration Issues held a second meeting Wednesday, hearing presentations
from the Oklahoma Department of Corrections, the Oklahoma Department
of Public Safety and the Oklahoma Criminal Justice Resource Center.
Sen. Daisy
Lawler, Chair of the Task Force, said information presented
by the agencies further illustrated the scope of the illegal immigration
problem and gave task force members a better understanding of how
state corrections and law enforcement agencies deal with illegal
immigrants under current laws.
“When we have to arrest and imprison illegal immigrants,
our taxpayers are forced to bear the burden,” said Lawler,
D-Comanche. “We learned today that the federal government
must become more responsive and reimburse states for those costs
through existing programs.”
K.C. Moon, Director of the Oklahoma Criminal Justice Resource
Center said the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP)
was established by the federal government to reimburse states and
localities which have incurred costs for incarcerating illegal aliens.
However, the program administered by the Bureau of Justice has faced
funding cuts making it impossible for states and localities to be
adequately reimbursed. In fiscal year 2003, Moon noted, the SCAAP
program reimbursed states for only about 14 percent of criminal
aliens the state had identified.
According to Paul Kirkpatrick of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections,
387 deportable detainees are currently imprisoned in Oklahoma facilities.
The agency estimates Oklahoma spends nearly $7 million annually
to detain illegal immigrants.
“The unwillingness of the federal government to adequately
fund this program sends the wrong message,” Lawler said. “When
we arrest and detain illegal immigrants, our state should be reimbursed
and policy needs to be developed to ensure this problem doesn’t
persist.”
Sen. Kenneth Corn, task force member, suggested that deporting
illegal immigrants who have committed felony offenses could result
in substantial savings to the state. Noting that state prisons are
currently dealing with a lack of bed space and a budget shortfall,
Corn said model legislation in Georgia has been effective in reducing
prison congestion by adopting the policy.
Lawler said repeated attempts had been made to schedule a presentation
from officials with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement division
of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, but all have been declined.
Lawler added the task force would likely meet again within the
month, and the panel’s findings and recommendations must be
submitted to the Senate President Pro Tempore by November 30, 2006.
For more information contact:
Senator Lawler's Office - (405) 521-5569

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