Jeffco sheriff pushes back on ‘misleading’ Denver ICE statement

The Jefferson County Sheriff s Office is pushing back against a misleading message posted by U S Immigration and Customs Enforcement s Denver field office which sheriff s bureaucrats say faulted them for following Colorado immigration laws by not coordinating with federal agents before releasing a man from jail The Wednesday post on Denver ICE s X account appealed for neighborhood assistance finding a -year-old man from Honduras who was issued from Jefferson County without being turned over to ICE Sheriff s administrators disagreed with that characterization posting a lengthy response on the agency s own X profile and on ICE s initial post on Thursday afternoon Let s be clear we are not legally allowed to directly turn over an inmate to any law enforcement agency without a judicially authorized warrant under Colorado law That includes ICE sheriff s personnel wrote The man was initially arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and the sheriff s office received an order to release him at a m Wednesday A sheriff s official spoke to an ICE representative by phone eight minutes later to tell them the man would be distributed and ICE mentioned they would not be picking him up Jefferson County bureaucrats wrote The man was published from the jail at p m and ICE never came to the jail according to the sheriff s office When we called the ICE Denver office about their misleading post they made their position unmistakable if we do not provide ICE extra time to coordinate inmate pickups from our facility in violation of Colorado law deceptive posts like the previous evening s will become the norm sheriff s functionaries wrote Related Articles How President Trump s shifting deportation push has played out in Colorado There s no small moves Utah college apprentice arrested by ICE in Grand Junction granted bail Colorado won t say if it will turn over Medicaid information that feds could use to find immigrants Feds used group chat with Colorado sheriff to target Utah trainee for immigration arrest executives say Thousands join No Kings protests in Denver and across Colorado A spokesperson for the Denver ICE field office could not at once be reached for comment This is not the first time Colorado law enforcement have disputed statements made by the federal agency When two men escaped from ICE s Aurora detention center in March agency administrators mentioned local law enforcement was right now notified of the escape and declined to assist with the search But Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain refuted that claim and reported staff at the facility did not call to analysis the escape until nearly five hours after they realized two people were missing Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day