Activists, leaders condemn Nassau police-ICE partnership

Angel Reyes, 35, of Glen Cove, a coordinator with the immigrant rights organization Make the Road in Brentwood, served as the primary speaker throughout the hour-long protest outside the Nassau County Legislature. // Photo by Scott Brinton/Long Island Advocate

County Executive Blakeman emphasizes only known criminals would be detained

By Gabriel Prevots

More than a hundred protesters gathered on the steps of the Nassau County’s Theodore Roosevelt Executive and Legislative Building Friday to denounce County Executive Bruce Blakeman’s announcement that 10 county police detectives will be deputized to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Between chants in English and Spanish supporting immigrants, prominent representatives from immigrant rights advocacy groups, elected leaders and union members called on Blakeman to rescind his Feb. 5 decision and urged their communities to show solidarity with immigrants. 

Robert Agyemang, of Hempstead, vice president of the New York Immigration Coalition, speaking at the protest. // Photo by Scott Brinton/Long Island Advocate

Immigrants “are the bedrock of every community in this state and in this country, and under no circumstances should the state law enforcement or city law enforcement or municipal law enforcement be colluding with ICE,” said Robert Agyemang, of Hempstead, vice president of the New York Immigration Coalition. Agyemang was born in the U.S., and his parents emigrated from Ghana. 

“We’re here today, we’re sending the message: Blakeman, you need to do the right thing. You still have time to make it up,” said Angel Reyes, of Glen Cove, Long Island coordinator with the immigrant rights organization Make the Road in Brentwood, who served as emcee for the hour-long protest. 

In response to opposition to his announcement, Blakeman reaffirmed that the purpose of the deputized detectives would be “picking up criminals, people who are engaged in crimes … These aren’t going to be raids. These are going to be targeted enforcement of known criminals who are here illegally.”

It is unclear when Blakeman’s deputization of the county detectives will take place, as the details have not yet been made public. ICE collaborations with police departments under its 287(g) program are published on the agency’s website, and as of Feb. 16, Nassau County remained absent from the list.

Still, speakers emphasized that ICE’s current enforcement policies, laid out by President Trump, have had a chilling effect on immigrant communities throughout Long Island, instilling anxiety and fear and leading many to forgo help when they need it most. 

Marcia Estrada, a chapter coordinator with local women’s and immigrants’ rights organizations, shared her personal story of escaping “abuse, poverty and threats to my life” in Honduras and then domestic abuse in the United States.

Referring to the abuse, Estrada said, “If this had happened today with the police collaborating with ICE, I would have never sought help. I would have never called the police because I would have feared facing deportation, being separated from my children or even facing death.”

Dozens of protesters convened on the legislature’s steps to decry County Executive Bruce Blakeman’s recent policy to deputize police detectives to work with the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement. // Photo by Scott Brinton/Long Island Advocate

According to the New York Civil Liberties Union, the Feb. 14 protest was held on Valentine’s Day to “demonstrate love and support for Long Island immigrants, many of whom are living in fear due to an escalation in ICE activity in their communities.”

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