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House passes bill encouraging sheriff participation in federal 287(g) immigration agreements after heated debate
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Summary
The Tennessee House approved House Bill 22-19 on third reading after floor debate about local capacity, liability and public-safety data. Sponsor Rep. Garrett framed the measure as improving coordination with federal authorities; critics warned of unfunded mandates and questioned cited crime statistics.
The Tennessee House of Representatives passed House Bill 22-19 on third and final consideration, a measure that requires local sheriffs to enter into cooperative agreements under 287(g) to coordinate immigration enforcement with federal authorities.
Representative Garrett, the bill sponsor, said the measure "strengthens our immigration enforcement through long-term strategic partnership between our sheriffs and the federal government to keep our counties and communities safe," describing four optional program models counties could adopt and saying local officials would retain discretion which model to choose. He renewed his motion on the floor and said the bill was intended to address violent crime allegedly committed by noncitizens cited in the sponsor's statistics.
Opponents sharply questioned those claims and the bill's fiscal impact. Representative Johnson said the figures cited were "believed to be immigrants, not proven to be immigrants" and stressed that charges are not convictions; she described the fiscal note as unreliable and labeled the measure an "unfunded mandate" that could saddle rural sheriffs with unbudgeted costs and legal risk. Representative Jones urged making participation permissive for jurisdictions that lack capacity and noted some counties declined prior grant incentives because they could not afford the program.
Floor amendments were offered and debated; several attempts to add transparency reporting or to make participation permissive failed on procedural votes. After the final roll call the Clerk reported 71 yea votes and 25 nays; the Speaker declared the bill passed on third reading.
The bill's supporters said federal reimbursement mechanisms exist for detention costs and argued the measure helps protect Tennesseans. Critics said the statute will shift responsibilities and risk to under-resourced localities and stressed the need for careful fiscal review.
Next steps: The bill, having passed the House on third reading, will be transmitted to the Senate or proceed according to legislative scheduling procedures.

