U.S. immigration authorities are ramping up pressure on landlords to hand over private tenant information; including leases, applications, ID cards and even names of roommates with subpoenas that aren’t signed by judges. Legal experts and property managers are calling it a troubling escalation in federal enforcement efforts, reported by AP.
These so-called “information enforcement subpoenas” have been issued by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ anti-fraud unit, and at least some are tied to recent changes under the Trump administration’s renewed push for mass deportations. The documents are not signed by a judge, which raises serious legal questions for landlords on whether they’re even required to comply.
In Atlanta, real estate attorney Eric Teusink revealed that several of his clients received such subpoenas, which request entire tenant files. That could mean giving away data on employment history, marital status, and other family relationships — without the tenant ever being informed.
Landlords across the country are reportedly confused and uneasy. While they’re used to complying with court-signed orders for police investigations or surveillance footage, this new round of subpoenas lacks judicial oversight. Teusink described them as “fishing expeditions,” with landlords caught in the middle.
Housing law experts say compliance isn’t mandatory unless the document is signed by a judge. If landlords cooperate anyway, they could be exposing themselves to violations of the Fair Housing Act.
Tricia McLaughlin, a Homeland Security spokeswoman, insists the subpoenas are legitimate and warn of legal consequences for non-compliance. But critics aren’t convinced.
Technically, ICE can enforce these subpoenas in federal court but they’d need a judge to do so. And that step allows recipients a chance to fight back, something most landlords never realize before complying.
Source: poligirlsayswhat balleralert.com









