Republicans in Georgia are calling for new laws to crack down on immigrants after a nursing student was killed

State Rep. Jesse Petrea, R-Savannah, speaks to the media after a meeting of the House Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee at the Paul D. Coverdell Legislative Office Building about HB 1105, which would penalize sheriffs who do not cooperate with the state's immigration authorities Federal vote in Atlanta, Tuesday, February 27, 2024 Petrea is the sponsor of the bill that passed the committee. (Arvin Temkar/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

ATLANTA (AP) — Republicans in the Georgia House of Representatives are pushing to require every eligible police and sheriff's department to help identify undocumented immigrants, arrest them and detain them for deportation.

The proposal advanced through the U.S. House Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee on Tuesday and went to the full House for further debate after police accused a Venezuelan man of assaulting a nursing student on the University of Georgia campus to have been beaten to death.

Jose Ibarra was arrested Friday on murder and assault charges in connection with Thursday's death of 22-year-old Laken Riley. Ibarra, 26, is a Venezuelan citizen who entered the United States illegally in 2022, according to immigration authorities. It is unclear whether he has applied for asylum.

Riley studied nursing at Augusta University's Athens campus after beginning her college career at the University of Georgia's Athens campus. She was found dead Thursday after a roommate reported she had not returned from a morning run in a wooded area.

Also on Tuesday, the University of Georgia announced it would spend $7.3 million to improve campus security, and Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives demanded information about Ibarra from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

The bill would move Georgia closer to states with stricter immigration laws like Texas, which starting in March will allow police to arrest migrants entering the state illegally and give local judges the power to expel them from the country

Georgia itself had already passed a strict anti-immigration law in 2011, but later withdrew parts of it. That measure allowed officials to block anyone deemed “suspicious” from checking documents, required governments and large companies to use a federal database called E-Verify to check the immigration status of new employees, required applicants for public benefits, required proof of citizenship and set up a panel to punish local governments that didn't crack down.

The bill, which the Georgia committee passed Tuesday, would also set new requirements for how prison officials with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement should check whether people are known to be in the country illegally.

“This issue is certainly the most important issue in my community right now as we have faced an unspeakable tragedy in Athens over the past few days,” said Republican Rep. Houston Gaines of Athens.

The Immigrant Legal Resource Center counted six of 159 Georgia counties with 287(g) agreements with ICE in July. Five of them are just in prison. Oconee County, a suburb of Athens, issues arrest warrants for immigration violations and deportation orders. State agencies also cooperate with ICE.

According to the center, at least three counties in Georgia have stopped cooperating with ICE at the jail, including two large suburban Atlanta counties where it was a major election issue — Gwinnett County and Cobb County.

Isabel Otero, policy director for the Southern Poverty Law Center in Georgia, said the bill's supporters are “determined to force localities to enforce immigration laws” even if police and sheriff's departments lack the capacity to do so.

“Unfortunately, people have exploited the death of a young woman for political purposes in a way that is really disheartening,” Otero said.

Republican state Rep. Jesse Petrea of ​​Savannah said the bill is necessary to enforce existing law that requires sheriffs to check with ICE on people who do not appear to be American citizens.

“Maybe half of our sheriffs follow this law,” Petrea said. “That’s unfortunate, and that’s what we’re trying to address here.”

Sheriffs deny they are breaking the law, said Terry Norris, executive director of the Georgia Sheriffs' Association. He said even Athens-Clarke County, which Republicans call a “sanctuary” for undocumented immigrants, is complying.

Petrea's bill would make sheriffs who fail to check immigration status guilty of the crime of violating their oath of office. The bill would also deny state funding to prisons and sheriffs that don't cooperate.

The law stipulates that detainees cannot be held in an immigration detention center for more than 48 hours without a warrant signed by a federal judge. However, in later states, sheriffs and jailers must comply with all requests from ICE detainees.

Gaines is pushing a second bill, House Bill 1359, that would allow people to seek property tax refunds if cities or counties refuse to communicate with immigration authorities. The refunds would also apply if a local government refuses to enforce vagrancy laws against homeless people.

The University of Georgia said it will increase its police budget by 20% to hire more officers and increase salaries. The university said the additional security personnel will patrol areas where students gather at night, including 24-hour guarding in libraries. It also said a subsidized ride-hailing system would operate from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m., instead of the current four hours a night.

The university said it will install a system of combined surveillance cameras and blue light emergency call boxes. The university had previously removed emergency call boxes on the grounds that they were rarely used by cell phone-carrying students. More lights at zebra crossings, license plate readers and more fences are also planned.

The university said the package will cost $7.3 million, including $5.5 million in one-time investments and $1.8 million in ongoing expenses.

In Washington, Republican chairmen of several House committees sent separate letters to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Majorkas demanding information about how ICE handled the Ibarra case.

Newly filed affidavits say Ibarra used an object as a weapon in the crime and is accused of “disfiguring” Riley's skull. Police say Ibarra dragged the 22-year-old to a remote area on Thursday, according to affidavits obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday.

Authorities have not said exactly how Riley was killed, only that her death was caused by blunt force trauma.

District Attorney Deborah Gonzalez, who oversees prosecutions in Athens-Clarke County, said Monday that she is appointing a special prosecutor to prosecute Ibarra. Gonzalez, who is up for re-election this year, has been criticized for being ineffective, losing several cases and having several deputy district attorneys leave office.