Judge voices skepticism toward Colorado Gov. Jared Polis’ move to comply with ICE subpoena in hearing ...Middle East

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A Denver judge appeared unpersuaded Monday that a federal subpoena referencing child abuse gave Gov. Jared Polis the latitude to side-step Colorado law and turn over personal information about undocumented children and their sponsors to immigration authorities.

“It’s one of those instances where — Am I going to believe you, or am I going to believe my own lying eyes?” District Judge A. Bruce Jones told Thomas Rogers III, a private attorney representing Polis in a lawsuit filed by a state employee who contends that Polis’ directive to comply with the subpoena violates state law.

Jones also noted that Polis’ office hadn’t appeared to seek any more information about the subpoena before complying with. A senior state employee later testified that, to his knowledge, Polis’ office made no effort to determine if authorities were actually investigating child abuse, and the office did not provide assurances to state employees that the data requested would only be used to check on the child’s welfare, rather than to deport them.

The testimony and Jones’ skepticism came at the start of Monday’s hearing in a state labor employee’s lawsuit against Polis. The employee, Scott Moss, argue that Polis’ order to turn over the personal information of 35 people to federal immigration authorities ran afoul of a law that generally prohibits information-sharing with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement.

The hearing is set to continue Tuesday afternoon, after which Jones will decide whether to temporarily — or permanently — block Polis’ directive to comply with the subpoena.

Moss, a director in the state Department of Labor and Employment, has contended that the subpoena is intended to identify undocumented children for deportation, while Polis’ attorneys have argued that the governor decided to fulfill the subpoena last month because it was related to a criminal investigation into whether unaccompanied kids were being cared for and not abused.

The subpoena, which the department received in late April, seeks personal information on the sponsors of unaccompanied and undocumented children to ensure that the children are cared for and not being exploited or abused. Polis’ office has argued in statements to The Denver Post that the subpoena was a “tailored and specific” request for an “investigation regarding child exploitation, abuse, and trafficking.”

While state law largely prohibits governmental employees from giving such information to ICE without a judge’s order, officials here can do so if the request is part of a criminal investigation.

Pressed for evidence of such an investigation earlier this month, Polis’ office referred The Post to the subpoena itself. On Monday, Rogers reiterated that Polis effectively trusted ICE and the plain language of the subpoena, which was issued by ICE’s criminal investigative branch.

“It says it’s a criminal investigation. We take it at its representation,” Rogers said.

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But Jones said Monday that Polis’ argument that the subpoena was for “criminal purposes” wasn’t very persuasive “because that’s not what the subpoena says.”

The document refers to “investigative activities” that amount to a welfare check of the children, who have been released to the custody of sponsors, typically family members, while the children await deportation proceedings. The subpoena, which is not signed by a judge, is labeled as an “immigration enforcement subpoena,” and it cites federal statute related to deportation.

Jones asked Rogers to point him to the language in the subpoena that referenced a criminal investigation.

After Rogers quoted from the subpoena’s references to investigative activities seeking to ensure children aren’t being exploited, Jones took a moment to reread the document. He turned back to Rogers.

“I’m going to stick with my lying eyes,” he said.

Rogers has argued that Moss — as well as two labor unions and a nonprofit law firm that’s joined the case — have no standing to sue Polis because Moss didn’t personally have to comply and that he didn’t face any repercussions for not doing so.

Joe Barela, the executive director of the labor department and Moss’ boss, testified Monday that while Polis initially decided not to comply with the subpoena, the governor directed officials to comply on May 23 — the same day he signed a law expanding prohibitions on sharing information with ICE.

Barela testified on behalf of the governor’s office and of Polis, whom Moss’ attorneys had initially wanted to testify.

Barela, who said his department received a separate ICE subpoena in March, said that he and the governor’s office thought that “if there could possibly be a chance that sponsors had children in their care” who were accounted for and were being abused or exploited, “we wanted to make sure that we didn’t prevent any investigation from finding that out.”

Still, he said his department was concerned about what the information could be used for, and the agency sought assurances that the records would only be used for a criminal investigation.

But he acknowledged that he wasn’t aware of any assurances the state had received that assuaged that concern before Polis decided to comply. He also said he wasn’t aware of any efforts by the governor’s office to determine if an investigation actually existed or that it had received any evidence that children were being abused.

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