The relationship Dallas police should have with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been an ongoing debate among city leaders and residents.
Over the last year, residents have called on city leadership to be more transparent about ICEโs presence in Dallas, and the role local officers play in immigration enforcement.
โโIt’s gotten to the point where they’re getting more aggressive, and they’re getting bolder out there in the streets. That’s the shift that’s happening right now,โ Azael Alvarez, an organizer with El Movimiento, told Courier Texas.
Alvarez has been fighting back against President Donald Trumpโs mass deportation efforts since his second term began. Alvarez went viral last year after recording an incident outside a 7-Eleven in South Dallas, where a group of masked ICE agents surrounded a car in what he described as a kidnapping while Dallas police officers stood by watching.
โWhen stuff like that becomes normalized, it puts fear in the community,โ he said.
In April, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott sent a letter to Dallas officials threatening to withhold millions of dollars in state and federal funding if the Dallas Police Department did not adjust its guidelines and comply with a state grant agreement requiring the city to work with the Department of Homeland Security on immigration enforcement.
โโI am so disappointed that he would use that kind of tactic against the city of Dallas, which is already having trouble financing the police,โ Margo Miller, a Dallas resident, told Courier Texas during a โCommunity Not Cagesโ event on April 25. โWe are 600 police officers short and are already short on funds, and I think it’s absolutely criminal for him to do that.โ
Shortly after Abbottโs threats, Dallas Police Chief Daniel Comeaux announced his department would comply with the governorโs demands. City Manager Kimberly Tolbert similarly released a memo stating the city is now in compliance with the grant agreement.
One of the biggest concerns about the cityโs response to Abbottโs threats, Alvarez said, was that it was made without a city council vote.
โโDallas revised the police general order, and that decision was made administratively without a city council vote or public process,โ he said. โSo the concern isnโt necessarily the policy itself, but how it was implemented and what we’re seeing now as a result. They changed the policy without the publicโs or city councilโs consent.โ
โItโs going to change how families engage in public lifeโwith schools, with public safety and everyday life across North Texas,โ he added.
This is not the first time the cityโs handling of ICE has raised residentsโ concerns.
Comeaux announced in October he turned down $25 million to join an ICE 287(g) program, which would have allowed local officers to collaborate with ICE and perform federal immigration duties. Just days later, Mayor Eric Johnson called on the city council to reconsider the offer.
Ultimately, the city council backed Comeauxโs decision to remain out of a 287(g) agreement. But just three months later, Comeaux refused to share details and data on how often DPD interacts with ICE, rejecting a request made by the Community Police Oversight Board in January.
โThis is not just an immigration issue,โ Alvarez said. โWe need to focus on it being a local issue, a governance issue, an education issue, and a public trust issue.โ
In South Dallas, an ICE warehouse proposal became a growing concern earlier this year. After the Washington Post reported ICE had plans to convert an Amazon warehouse into an immigrant detention center, residents pushed back and shut the plans down.
โโHutchins is a wonderful example of community coming together to oppose something that is a violation of human rights,โ Samantha Mitchell, an organizer with Indivisible Dallas, told Courier Texas. โThe city of Hutchins specifically had fewer people than would have been housed in that detention center, so it would’ve put an enormous strain on their municipal capacities and resources.โ
โNot only that, but it is a human rights violation to hold people without charge and to deport them to countries they’re not even from,โ she added. โBut only one or two or three people can’t do anything against it, we have to come together as a community. We have to come together despite any disagreements we might have.โ
For Dallas residents who want to get involved but donโt know where, Alvarez said there are options.
โโThere’s multiple different roles you can play in these coalition groups,โ he said. โIf you’re a lawyer, you can help write ordinances for your local governments. If you’re part of the media, you can amplify these stories. If youโre a grassroots, on-the-ground resident, you can go to city council meetings and speak up about itโbecause that’s what local governments should be, right? They should listen to their constituents and find out a way on how to enact policies throughout the city.โ
โWe saw what happened in Hutchins,โ he added. โThe city council and the mayor joined forces with the residents and got it shut down. It took a group of residents who didn’t even know each other, but they’re all connected in this one issue.โ
As Dallas residents continue to push for more transparency and fight back against laws like Senate Bill 8, which requires local sheriffs to perform federal immigration duties, they could soon face a new obstacle.
Texas lawmakers passed Senate Bill 4 in 2023, which allows local law enforcement to arrest individuals suspected of entering the country illegally. Federal courts paused SB 4โs implementation after it was signed into law, but now the bill could take effect as soon as May 15.
The American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU of Texas, and the Texas Civil Rights Project have filed an emergency class-action lawsuit seeking a preliminary injunction to block several provisions of the bill so it doesnโt take effect.
โSB 4 would transform our police and judges into immigration agentsโthreatening neighbors who have families here, who have lived here for years, even those who have legal status,โ Adriana Piรฑon, legal director of the ACLU of Texas, said in a statement. โImmigration enforcement is exclusively the federal government’s arena, and no state has ever claimed the power Texas threatens to wield here. We are taking this back to court to defend our Texas communities.โ


















