After Jenkintown Borough Council passed a policy that outlined the police department’s relationship with ICE, community members pushed back, saying it was harmful for immigrant communities. In November, Jenkintown Mayor Gabriel Lerman told WHYY News the borough is revising the policy.

“Jenkintown needs a new policy that protects the community, not one that hands our neighbors over to ICE,” Wechterman said. “And this is a lesson for every community in the county. Read your policies, know what’s being done in your name and make sure they reflect your values. Silence and assumptions are dangerous. We have to stay vigilant. We have to stay organized, and we have to insist that our local government uphold the values we claim to stand for.”

The ultimate goal is “transparency” so officials can get ahead of issues that can arise from increased immigration enforcement action in any given area of the county, Vincent said.

“If immigrants don’t feel safe to call the police, how many people will be hurt?” she told WHYY News. “If you can’t call the police, if you’re victimized by a crime, or if somebody’s missing, or somebody hurts you, or even medical emergencies …  it’s not an accusation, as much as it’s a call for accountability and transparency and opening up lines of communication now, before it gets worse.”

At a press conference Thursday, Vincent and other organizers stood next to a photo of a broken car window, which she said ICE agents smashed during an arrest of people they pulled over in a car in Norristown on Nov. 5.

Vincent said residents with Montco Community Watch who have been acting as legal observers during ICE arrests have documented agents violating due process and making arrests without a warrant. Agents wear masks and fail to identify themselves, she said, and “detentions are violent.”

“It just seems that cruelty is the point,” she said.
Stephanie Vincent speaking at podiumStephanie Vincent, a leader with Montco Community Watch and a lead organizer with Community for Change Montgomery County, said Monto Community Watch organizers have documented 97 confirmed detentions and 31 suspected detentions by ICE agents in the county since the beginning of summer. (Emily Neil/WHYY)

ICE’s Philadelphia field office did not respond to a request for a comment.

“Public safety depends on trust, and right now, ICE is burning trust to the ground,” Vincent said. “That’s why we’re calling on every elected official, every municipal chief and every police department in Montgomery County to be part of the solution, not part of the confusion … ICE has created a crisis in our neighborhoods, and we cannot afford silence, mixed signals or leadership that only reacts once harm has already happened.”