Colorado Senate Democrats passed a bill on Monday aimed at providing a series of new legal protections to illegal immigrants in the state to shield them from the Trump administration’s ongoing mass-deportation efforts.
Senate Bill 25-276 would add new limitations on where Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents could operate in the state, prohibit local governments from sharing key information with ICE, and make it easier for noncitizens to get their guilty pleas to misdemeanor charges vacated so they could more easily obtain legal status.
The bill passed the state Senate on a near-party-line vote, 22-13, with one Democrat joining Republicans in opposition; state Senator Kyle Mullica said he needed more time to understand a series of proposed amendments, according to news reports.
The proposal is intended to build on existing protections for illegal immigrants that are already enshrined in Colorado law. Under current state law, for example, state agencies are barred from disclosing personal information to ICE that isn’t publicly available — things like birthdays, addresses, and immigration status. Under SB 276, local governments would not be able to share that information with immigration authorities either. Public child-care centers, schools, and health-care facilities would also be prohibited from sharing personal identifying information with ICE.
The bill would prohibit immigration agents from accessing non-public spaces in jails, hospitals, libraries, schools, and child-care centers without a warrant, a common legal tactic to stymie ICE. Supporters of ICE’s efforts note that there is no legal mechanism in place for judges to sign criminal warrants for administrative immigration proceedings.











