Senate advances committee report on bill limiting jail‑based cooperation with federal immigration enforcement after heated debate
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Summary
The Maryland Senate on April 10 adopted a committee report on a bill that restricts when local correctional facilities may share immigration information with federal authorities, defeating multiple floor amendments that would have expanded exceptions. Supporters said the measure protects due process; opponents said it could hinder public‑safety cooperation.
The Maryland Senate adopted the committee report on Senate Bill 791 on April 10 after a day of extended debate and a string of failed floor amendments.
The bill, as advanced by the Judiciary Committee, would limit when state correctional facilities and local authorities may provide information or otherwise coordinate with federal immigration authorities, preserving cooperation for cases involving convictions of felonies, offenses requiring registration on the sex‑offender registry, or sentences resulting in state incarceration. "The bill was heard on February 25," the floor leader said in defending the report, "and the sum and substance of this bill have been before the body... for several weeks now." The Senate adopted the committee report as amended by a recorded vote (the clerk announced 28 votes in the affirmative).
Supporters framed the measure as a due‑process and public‑trust safeguard that will encourage community cooperation with policing and avoid triggering removal proceedings in response to minor charges. The floor leader argued the change is designed to ensure "due process and public safety" by restricting immigration notifications except in narrowly defined, post‑conviction circumstances.
Opponents said the bill narrows law‑enforcement options and could impede operations that currently rely on early information sharing. The minority leader urged additional time to review committee amendments and criticized what she called a last‑minute voting session the previous night that, she said, limited notice for advocates and some members: "There was somewhat of a secret voting session last night that this bill was brought before that people were not aware of," she said. A senator opposing the bill called the measure "reckless," adding that limiting cooperation "with our federal partners is reckless ideology" and warning it could frustrate investigations.
Several floor amendments sought to broaden the bill’s exceptions — proposing, for example, that law enforcement be allowed to notify federal partners at the point of arrest or for specified violent and trafficking charges, or to restore narrower jail‑based collaboration models. Those amendments were repeatedly offered and failed on recorded roll calls.
Supporters of broader cooperation pointed to recent, multi‑jurisdictional investigations — including a large Eastern Shore drug seizure cited by senators — as examples where earlier federal‑local coordination assisted interdiction. Backers of the bill responded that criminal investigations and serious public‑safety cooperation are not barred by the statute as drafted, and that the measure deliberately focuses on limiting immigration‑related notifications absent conviction to protect families and ensure state‑level due process.
The committee report’s adoption clears the bill for additional floor consideration under the Senate calendar process; the chamber did not complete final third‑reading passage on April 10. The session included multiple other bills advanced by unanimous or voice votes, and the Senate adjourned with plans to reconvene later in the day.
What happens next: SB 791 will remain on the Senate calendar for further floor action; sponsors and opponents indicated additional amendment activity may resume when the chamber reconvenes.

