Grafton County Sheriff’s Office among agencies agreeing to participate in mass deportations
Published: 03-11-2025 4:00 PM |
A growing number of New Hampshire law enforcement agencies have been approved to join a federal program that deputizes local officers to carry out federal immigration enforcement, including serving warrants and detaining people suspected of being in the country illegally. No other law enforcement agency in any other New England state has asked to join the program this year.
The sheriff’s office in Belknap and Grafton counties signed agreements to join Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s 287(g) program. So have the police departments in Gorham, N.H., Ossipee, N.H., Colebrook, N.H., and Pittsburg, N.H. State Police have a pending application. Prior to February of this year, no New Hampshire law enforcement agency was participating in the program.
Belknap County Sheriff William Wright said a dozen of his deputies are joining the training program. The office has about two dozen employees, according to a 2023 budget document.
He said it was similar to other federal collaborations his department engages in, citing his experience serving warrants while he was assigned to a task force with the U.S. Marshals Service.
He added that while encounters with people without legal status were rare in Belknap County, having immigration-trained deputies in the county was a way to streamline the detention process and collaborate with ICE. He said it would be more effective for local police departments to call the sheriff’s office for an immigration incident instead of waiting for ICE agents from Massachusetts.
“With the ICE-related incidents, the only way I’ll really know what’s going on is to be involved,” he said. “When I choose to stand on the sidelines and not be involved, then I don’t know what’s going on and I get left out, so I can’t protect the people if I don’t know what’s going on.”
The New Hampshire police departments that have announced their participation with ICE are part of the task force model of the program, which is meant to be a “force multiplier” for immigration enforcement while police are completing their routine duties.
Although 287(g) programs have existed for about two decades, the task force model has been particularly controversial. It was discontinued in 2012 following lawsuits over racial profiling of Latino drivers in North Carolina, but the Trump administration reinstated it in February following an executive order.
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Local immigration advocates say that the program creates a potential for profiling, increases costs for local police departments and undoes the work those departments have done to build trust with local communities.
“Something like the 287(g) will just strike fear into the heart of the community,” said Sarah Jane Knoy from the Granite State Organizing Project. ”Because it will require police to not be concerned about community safety, but instead to try to enforce complicated federal immigration law.”
State Police follow a fair and impartial policing policy from 2019 that lays out specific guidance for troopers on immigration enforcement.
For example, officers can’t stop or detain someone solely based on their perceived immigration status.
A spokesperson for State Police did not immediately return a request for comment about how this policy would work if that agency is accepted into the federal enforcement program. ICE has also not responded to a request for comment.
In response to the concerns about racial profiling, Wright said he didn’t think there is racial profiling in New Hampshire and was not aware of a case of racial profiling in the 27 years he has been in law enforcement.
A lawsuit in 2019 alleged racial profiling by a State Trooper.
Wright said that he will be monitoring the rollout of the program and discontinue the county’s participation with ICE if he doesn’t like something that’s happening, although he said he doesn’t anticipate any problems with participating in the program.
These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information visit collaborativenh.org.