Bill
Sponsor avatar

BILL • US SENATE

S 4589

A bill to improve immigration enforcement transparency, preserve civil rights, and improve the accountability of immigration enforcement personnel, and for other purposes.

119th Congress
Introduced by Michael Bennet,

The bill aims to increase transparency in immigration enforcement, strengthen civil rights protections, and bolster accountability for enforcement personnel.

Introduced in Senate
0
0
Bill Summary · S 4589

Bill Overview

S. 4589, introduced in the 119th Congress and referred to the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, seeks to improve immigration enforcement transparency, protect civil rights, and enhance accountability of immigration enforcement personnel. A co-sponsor on the bill is Senator Michael Bennet.

Purpose and Intent

  • Enhance transparency in U.S. immigration enforcement activities.
  • Strengthen protections for civil rights and civil liberties related to immigration enforcement.
  • Improve accountability mechanisms for personnel involved in immigration enforcement operations.

Key Provisions (as described by bill title and typical accompanying measures)

Note: The following provisions are inferred from the bill’s title and standard legislative practice for similar measures. For precise text, refer to the bill’s official language.

  • Transparency Improvements

    • Require more detailed reporting on immigration enforcement actions, including metrics on arrests, removals, and detention practices.
    • Mandate public accessibility to certain enforcement data, dashboards, or annual reports to investors in oversight and civil rights enforcement.
    • Increased disclosure around_streamlining procedures, warrants, and use-of-force incidents involving immigration enforcement personnel.
  • Civil Rights Protections

    • Establish or reinforce protections against discriminatory practices in enforcement actions.
    • Prohibit or restrict certain enforcement practices that could lead to civil rights violations.
    • Require training, compliance checks, and remedies for individuals whose civil rights may be harmed by enforcement activities.
  • Accountability Mechanisms for Enforcement Personnel

    • Strengthen internal disciplinary processes for misconduct.
    • Create or bolster independent or external oversight bodies to investigate complaints against immigration enforcement personnel.
    • Require regular audits or evaluations of agency practices related to detention, enforcement, and use-of-force.
  • Other Provisions

    • Provisions for reporting to Congress on enforcement outcomes and civil rights impacts.
    • Possible grant or funding provisions to support compliance, training, or oversight infrastructure.
    • Potential procedural requirements for agency coordination with other departments or states to ensure consistent standards.

Who Would Be Affected

  • Federal immigration enforcement personnel and agencies responsible for immigration enforcement.
  • Individuals subject to immigration enforcement actions (e.g., detainees, individuals in removal or detention proceedings).
  • Civil rights and civil liberties organizations, oversight bodies, and potentially state or local partners involved in enforcement activities.
  • Agency accountability offices and external oversight entities responsible for enforcement conduct.

Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Action History:
    • Introduced in the Senate and read twice.
    • Referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on May 20, 2026.
  • Next steps typically include committee hearings, potential amendments, and eventual floor consideration in the Senate. If advanced, the bill would proceed to negotiations with the House (if applicable) and potential passage or enactment.

Potential Impacts

  • Increased transparency around immigration enforcement data and practices.
  • Strengthened civil rights protections for individuals involved in or affected by enforcement actions.
  • Expanded accountability mechanisms that could influence agency culture, training, and supervision.
  • Possible implications for enforcement workload, reporting requirements, and interagency cooperation.

If you would like, I can tailor this summary to include the full text’s specific sections, line-item provisions, or compare it to prior related legislation to provide a more granular view.

Hi! I'm your AI assistant for S 4589. I can help you understand its provisions, impacts, and answer any questions.

Key Provisions Impacts Timeline
Sign in to chat

Start the Conversation

Be the first to share your thoughts on this petition. Your voice matters!

Share your opinion above