A state appeals court ruled on April 8, 2022, that police do not have to warn crime suspects that their statements to police could impact their immigration status. (Photo by New Jersey Monitor)
Police do not have to — and should not — advise crime suspects that their cooperation could impact their immigration status, a New Jersey appeals court ruled Friday.
Superior Court Judge Richard J. Geiger, writing for a three-judge appellate panel, agreed with a lower court’s ruling that a Miranda warning, in which police advise suspects of their rights to remain silent and get an attorney, is sufficient protection for people being interrogated.
Officers have no duty to tell undocumented immigrants who are suspects that they should consult with an immigration attorney before cooperating with investigators — nor warn suspects that their statements could result in deportation or other immigration action against them, Geiger added.
“Law enforcement officers cannot and should not be expected to accurately predict the immigration impact of a suspect’s statement on potential charges that have not yet been filed,” Geiger wrote.
Given the inherent unpredictability of immigration enforcement decisions and shifting federal policies, law enforcement officers act at their peril — and may endanger the admissibility of an otherwise knowing and voluntary confession — by predicting or commenting on whether an interrogee may be deported, he wrote.
The decision arose from an appeal by Nestor Francisco, an undocumented immigrant from the Dominican Republic who was convicted of a 2015 murder in Newark.
Stefan Van Jura is the assistant deputy public defender who represents Francisco. He said he will petition the state Supreme Court to review the case, but he declined to comment further.
A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office declined to comment.
Francisco did construction work for a couple in their Newark building and killed Charles Jeffrey, the elderly husband, after the couple accused him of stealing jewelry and shoes, court documents say.
When police first identified Francisco as a suspect, a Newark police detective read him his rights in Spanish, his native language, and Francisco waived his right to an attorney and agreed to talk to investigators, according to court paperwork.
Early in the hourlong interrogation, Francisco voiced concerns about his undocumented status, and a detective told him: “Your status has nothing to do with this. I am not going to ask questions on your status, or how you got here to this country. Absolutely nothing.”
Francisco then admitted his involvement in the slaying but claimed self-defense. A grand jury later indicted him, and at trial, a jury rejected his self-defense claim and convicted him of murder, weapons offenses, robbery, and tampering with evidence.
A judge sentenced him to 50 years in prison, and federal immigration authorities lodged an immigration detainer against him.
Francisco appealed his conviction and sentence, saying detectives misled him that his cooperation wouldn’t impact his immigration status and his statements to police consequently should have been inadmissible.
But in Friday’s ruling, Geiger affirmed both the conviction and sentence, saying Newark police correctly read Francisco his Miranda rights and Francisco knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived those rights before making his statement.
Geiger cited the state attorney general’s 2018 immigrant trust directive, which prohibits police from sharing information with federal immigration authorities, as another reason why police shouldn’t address immigration with suspects. Police cannot give suspects immigration advice because, due to the directive, they receive little to no training on immigration law, Geiger said.
“The directive imposes numerous limitations on law enforcement agencies and officers assisting federal immigration authorities in enforcing federal immigration law,” he wrote. “In short, law enforcement agencies and officers are not to assist federal immigration authorities unless required by law to do so.”
If suspects raise immigration concerns, officers can only remind them that police can’t give legal advice and that interrogees have the right to an attorney, Geiger added.
“The only sure way to avoid giving incorrect information or advice is to give no advice at all concerning immigration status or consequences,” Geiger wrote. “The point simply is that the best way to safeguard an interrogee’s constitutional right to remain silent is for police interrogators to remain silent as to federal immigration law and enforcement practices.”
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by Dana DiFilippo, New Jersey Monitor
April 8, 2022
Police do not have to — and should not — advise crime suspects that their cooperation could impact their immigration status, a New Jersey appeals court ruled Friday.
Superior Court Judge Richard J. Geiger, writing for a three-judge appellate panel, agreed with a lower court’s ruling that a Miranda warning, in which police advise suspects of their rights to remain silent and get an attorney, is sufficient protection for people being interrogated.
Officers have no duty to tell undocumented immigrants who are suspects that they should consult with an immigration attorney before cooperating with investigators — nor warn suspects that their statements could result in deportation or other immigration action against them, Geiger added.
“Law enforcement officers cannot and should not be expected to accurately predict the immigration impact of a suspect’s statement on potential charges that have not yet been filed,” Geiger wrote.
Given the inherent unpredictability of immigration enforcement decisions and shifting federal policies, law enforcement officers act at their peril — and may endanger the admissibility of an otherwise knowing and voluntary confession — by predicting or commenting on whether an interrogee may be deported, he wrote.
The decision arose from an appeal by Nestor Francisco, an undocumented immigrant from the Dominican Republic who was convicted of a 2015 murder in Newark.
Stefan Van Jura is the assistant deputy public defender who represents Francisco. He said he will petition the state Supreme Court to review the case, but he declined to comment further.
A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office declined to comment.
Francisco did construction work for a couple in their Newark building and killed Charles Jeffrey, the elderly husband, after the couple accused him of stealing jewelry and shoes, court documents say.
When police first identified Francisco as a suspect, a Newark police detective read him his rights in Spanish, his native language, and Francisco waived his right to an attorney and agreed to talk to investigators, according to court paperwork.
Early in the hourlong interrogation, Francisco voiced concerns about his undocumented status, and a detective told him: “Your status has nothing to do with this. I am not going to ask questions on your status, or how you got here to this country. Absolutely nothing.”
Francisco then admitted his involvement in the slaying but claimed self-defense. A grand jury later indicted him, and at trial, a jury rejected his self-defense claim and convicted him of murder, weapons offenses, robbery, and tampering with evidence.
A judge sentenced him to 50 years in prison, and federal immigration authorities lodged an immigration detainer against him.
Francisco appealed his conviction and sentence, saying detectives misled him that his cooperation wouldn’t impact his immigration status and his statements to police consequently should have been inadmissible.
But in Friday’s ruling, Geiger affirmed both the conviction and sentence, saying Newark police correctly read Francisco his Miranda rights and Francisco knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived those rights before making his statement.
Geiger cited the state attorney general’s 2018 immigrant trust directive, which prohibits police from sharing information with federal immigration authorities, as another reason why police shouldn’t address immigration with suspects. Police cannot give suspects immigration advice because, due to the directive, they receive little to no training on immigration law, Geiger said.
“The directive imposes numerous limitations on law enforcement agencies and officers assisting federal immigration authorities in enforcing federal immigration law,” he wrote. “In short, law enforcement agencies and officers are not to assist federal immigration authorities unless required by law to do so.”
If suspects raise immigration concerns, officers can only remind them that police can’t give legal advice and that interrogees have the right to an attorney, Geiger added.
“The only sure way to avoid giving incorrect information or advice is to give no advice at all concerning immigration status or consequences,” Geiger wrote. “The point simply is that the best way to safeguard an interrogee’s constitutional right to remain silent is for police interrogators to remain silent as to federal immigration law and enforcement practices.”
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Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics.
Dana DiFilippo comes to the New Jersey Monitor from WHYY, Philadelphia’s NPR station, and the Philadelphia Daily News, a paper known for exposing corruption and holding public officials accountable. Prior to that, she worked at newspapers in Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and suburban Philadelphia and has freelanced for various local and national magazines, newspapers and websites. She lives in Central Jersey with her husband, a photojournalist, and their two children.
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