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Ending 287(g) Agreements

This page provides a comprehensive toolkit for organizing to end 287(g) agreements in your jurisdiction. Based on the ILRC’s “Ending 287(g): A Toolkit for Local Organizers” and successful campaigns across the country.

ModelWhereWhat HappensRisk to Community
JEM (Jail Enforcement)Inside jailsPeople arrested on local charges have immigration status checkedMedium — only affects people already in custody
WSO (Warrant Service Officer)Inside jailsOfficers serve ICE administrative warrantsMedium — only affects people in custody
TFM (Task Force Model)AnywhereOfficers enforce immigration during ANY dutyHighest — any police encounter can become immigration enforcement

ICE has signed over 1,000 Memorandums of Agreement:

  • 522 TFM agreements across 35 states
  • 381 WSO agreements across 35 states
  • 132 JEM agreements across 28 states

This is a 641% increase from January 2025. ICE is aggressively expanding.

ICE is offering powerful incentives:

  • $10 billion in grants to participating agencies
  • Salary reimbursement for officers doing immigration work
  • Equipment, training, and resources
  • Political cover (“we’re just following federal law”)

Your counter-argument: These grants create long-term liability and dependency while undermining community trust.


In most jurisdictions, the Sheriff signs the 287(g) Memorandum of Agreement with ICE. The Sheriff is usually:

  • Elected — Accountable to voters
  • Independent — May not answer to county commission on operational decisions
  • Powerful — Controls jail, deputies, and enforcement policies

Strategy: Direct pressure on the Sheriff, combined with pressure from county officials who control the budget.

Secondary Targets: County Commissioners/Board

Section titled “Secondary Targets: County Commissioners/Board”

County commissioners typically:

  • Approve budgets — Can defund 287(g) operations
  • Provide oversight — Can investigate costs and impacts
  • Pass resolutions — Can formally request the Sheriff end the agreement
  • Influence — Can apply political pressure

Strategy: Even if commissioners can’t force the Sheriff to act, they can make it politically costly to continue.

  • County Attorney — Can advise on legal liability
  • Local prosecutors — Can refuse to accept cases tainted by 287(g)
  • City officials — Can pass resolutions, influence county politics
  • State officials — Can pass statewide bans

These arguments help counter “we’re just following the law” defenses.

Key point: ICE detainers are requests, not orders. Local agencies have no legal obligation to comply.

Legal basis:

  • Third Circuit Court of Appeals (Galarza v. Szalczyk, 2014): Honoring an ICE detainer without probable cause constitutes a new arrest
  • Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits have similar rulings
  • No federal law requires local agencies to hold people for ICE

Talking point: “The Sheriff can decline ICE detainers tomorrow without breaking any law. These are requests, not mandates.”

Key point: Holding someone beyond their release date without a warrant violates the Fourth Amendment.

Legal basis:

  • Miranda-Olivares v. Clackamas County (2014): County liable for holding woman 19 hours on ICE detainer
  • Morales v. Chadbourne (2015): Officers personally liable for detainer holds
  • Multiple settlements in the millions

Talking point: “Every day we hold someone on an ICE detainer without a warrant, we’re exposing the county to a lawsuit.”

Key point: 287(g) programs have a documented history of racial profiling.

Evidence:

  • DOJ found systematic racial profiling in Maricopa County under Sheriff Arpaio’s TFM
  • 65% of agencies with 287(g) agreements have documented civil rights violation records
  • TFM was suspended in 2012 specifically due to civil rights concerns before being resurrected

Talking point: “The Task Force Model was shut down once because of racial profiling. Why are we repeating that mistake?“

Key point: 287(g) is entirely voluntary. There’s no legal requirement to sign or maintain an agreement.

Talking point: “Other counties have declined to participate. There’s no federal requirement that we do this.”


Reality: 287(g) costs money that ICE doesn’t fully reimburse.

Costs to the county:

  • Training officers (40+ hours per officer)
  • Overtime for immigration-related duties
  • Jail beds for ICE holds
  • Legal defense when sued
  • Settlement costs when you lose

ICE’s $10B grants: Sound good but:

  • Create dependency on federal funding
  • Come with strings attached
  • Can be cut at any time
  • Don’t cover lawsuit settlements

Talking point: “How much has this program cost the county? How much has ICE actually reimbursed?“

Reality: When immigrants fear police, they don’t report crimes.

Evidence:

  • Major cities with sanctuary policies have lower crime rates on average
  • Studies show crime reporting drops in immigrant communities with aggressive enforcement
  • Domestic violence victims, witnesses to crime, and trafficking victims stay silent

Talking point: “When Maria is afraid to call 911, her abuser goes free. When Juan won’t report a robbery, the criminal targets someone else. This program makes everyone less safe.”

Reality: Police effectiveness depends on community cooperation.

Impact:

  • Community policing becomes impossible
  • Information sources dry up
  • Immigrant communities retreat from civic life
  • Children are afraid of police

Talking point: “The Sheriff’s job is to protect this community. How can deputies do that when half the county is afraid to talk to them?“

Reality: Deputies doing immigration work aren’t doing local law enforcement.

Questions to ask:

  • How many deputy hours go to 287(g) activities?
  • What local crimes aren’t being investigated?
  • What calls for service are delayed?

Talking point: “We’re paying our deputies to do ICE’s job instead of investigating local crimes.”


Know your enemy:

  • What model(s) does your jurisdiction use?
  • When was the agreement signed? When does it renew?
  • Who signed it (current or previous sheriff)?
  • What has it cost?
  • What impacts has it had?

Build your coalition:

  • Immigrant rights organizations
  • Faith communities
  • Civil liberties groups (ACLU)
  • Labor unions
  • Business groups
  • Public health advocates
  • Criminal justice reform groups

Gather stories:

  • Document personal impacts
  • Collect testimonies (with consent)
  • Track incidents and costs

Meet with decision-makers:

  • Request meetings with Sheriff, commissioners, relevant staff
  • Present your case privately first
  • Ask for specific commitments
  • Document their responses

Build public support:

  • Op-eds and letters to the editor
  • Community forums
  • Educational events
  • Social media campaigns

Engage media:

  • Background briefings with reporters
  • Share data and stories
  • Pitch investigative coverage

Escalate visibility:

  • Attend every public meeting
  • Pack public comment periods
  • Organize rallies and protests
  • Direct action if appropriate

Political accountability:

  • Track and publicize official positions
  • Engage voters
  • Support challenger candidates if needed
  • Make this an election issue

Keep the pressure on:

  • Weekly call campaigns
  • Regular media coverage
  • Coalition coordination
  • Don’t let the issue fade

When meeting with officials, ask for specific, concrete commitments:

  1. “Decline to renew the 287(g) MOA when it expires.”
  2. “End participation in the Task Force Model immediately.”
  3. “Require a judicial warrant before honoring any ICE detainer.”
  4. “Prohibit ICE from accessing the jail for interviews.”
  5. “Stop notifying ICE of release dates.”
  6. “Issue a public statement explaining why you’re making these changes.”
  1. “Pass a resolution calling on the Sheriff to end the 287(g) agreement.”
  2. “Remove funding for 287(g) operations from the Sheriff’s budget.”
  3. “Hold public hearings on the costs and impacts of 287(g).”
  4. “Request a formal report from the Sheriff on 287(g) activities.”
  5. “Invite community testimony on the program’s impacts.”
  1. “Introduce/support a bill banning 287(g) agreements statewide.”
  2. “Prohibit state resources from supporting 287(g) activities.”
  3. “Require reporting on all local-federal immigration cooperation.”
  1. “Co-sponsor the PROTECT Immigration Act (H.R. 3451).”
  2. “Vote against appropriations for 287(g) expansion.”
  3. “Request GAO investigation into 287(g) civil rights compliance.”

If Your Jurisdiction Doesn’t Have 287(g) Yet

Section titled “If Your Jurisdiction Doesn’t Have 287(g) Yet”

ICE is actively recruiting new agencies. Be proactive:

  1. Pass preemptive resolutions — Have your city/county formally decline participation
  2. Build relationships now — Know your officials before there’s a crisis
  3. Monitor for signs — Watch for sheriff statements, budget requests, ICE meetings
  4. Educate the community — Make sure people understand what 287(g) means
  • Sheriff attending ICE conferences
  • Budget requests for “immigration enforcement” or “federal partnerships”
  • Political rhetoric about “illegal immigration” from local officials
  • ICE representatives meeting with local law enforcement


Ended 287(g) after sustained community pressure, citing civil rights concerns and costs.

Passed comprehensive sanctuary ordinance limiting all ICE cooperation.

Declined to renew 287(g), adopted policy requiring judicial warrants for ICE requests.

Detainer policy requires judicial warrant and limits ICE access to jails.

Your community can be next.