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Maryland Gov. Wes Moore has signed emergency legislation barring state and local law enforcement agencies from entering into agreements with federal immigration authorities that allow officers to carry out civil immigration enforcement duties.
This legislation immediately ended the state’s participation in the long-running 287(g) program.
“In Maryland, we defend Constitutional rights and Constitutional policing — and we will not allow untrained, unqualified, and unaccountable ICE agents to deputize our law enforcement officers,” Moore said at the signing ceremony in the State House. “This bill draws a clear line: we will continue to work with federal partners to hold violent offenders accountable, but we refuse to blur the lines between state and federal authority in ways that undermine the trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve. Maryland is a community of immigrants, and that’s one of our greatest strengths because this country is incomplete without each and every one of us.”
The 287(g) program was created as part of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996. According to ICE, the program authorizes designated officers to perform specified immigration functions under federal oversight and includes several models, such as the Jail Enforcement Model and the Warrant Service Officer program. As of mid-February, ICE reported 1,427 active memorandums of agreement covering 40 states.
Supporters of the Maryland legislation argue that such partnerships erode trust between immigrant communities and local police, making residents less likely to report crimes or cooperate with investigations. Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller described the bill as personal.
“As an immigrant, this bill is deeply personal to me,” Miller said. “Immigrants make Maryland stronger every day, and our communities are safer when everyone feels protected and valued. This legislation ensures that our law enforcement resources remain focused on keeping Marylanders safe, not on actions that create fear in our neighborhoods.”
The law does not authorize the release of people charged with crimes, nor does it prevent cooperation with federal authorities on criminal investigations or the removal of violent offenders. State and local agencies may still notify ICE about the impending release of an individual of interest and coordinate transfers within constitutional limits, according to the governor’s office.
“Eighteen years in the program, we have placed into deportation with ICE 1,884 criminals,” Jenkins told reporters. “How much safer are we?”
In a separate statement, Republican State Sen. Justin Ready, who represents Carroll and Frederick Counties, said ending the program doesn’t end federal enforcement.
“It just ends local coordination that included documentation, training support and funding from the federal government,” Ready stated. “Cooperation between local and federal law enforcement produces greater public safety for everyone.”
Advocates for immigrant rights organizations called the measure a first step and urged lawmakers to adopt additional safeguards.“The bill to end 287(g) programs is a major victory, one that our coalition has fought for,” said Christianne Marguerite, director of communications at Progressive Maryland. “We must continue pushing for additional bills that will protect the greatest number of people, especially the most vulnerable.”
