‘Not a sanctuary state’ — ICE inducts 25 Laramie County deputies to enforce immigration
CHEYENNE — After completing a 40-hour training, 25 Laramie County Sheriff ’s Office deputies are officially certified to enforce federal immigration laws and assist Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
LCSO entered into three 287(g) agreements earlier this year, named for the section of the Immigration and Nationality Act that covers such operations. Each agreement empowers select deputies to carry out certain immigration enforcement functions.
“Wyoming does not want to be a sanctuary state for those who ignore our laws and threaten public safety,” Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak said during a news conference Wednesday.
ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Denver Field Office Director Robert Guadian swore in the deputies, giving them each a challenge coin signifying their certification.
The Laramie County jail has been approved by ICE to hold immigration detainees awaiting deportation, with space for an estimated 100 people.
The jail is currently awaiting an estimated 10 ICE detainees from a facility in Colorado, which is overcrowded and currently holds 11 detainees. While that leaves space for 79 more detainees, Kozak said they are trying to reserve the space for detainments by task force officers and other agencies that may become involved in 287(g), such as the Wyoming Highway Patrol, which announced a task force agreement in July.
The jail isn’t providing this space free of charge.
Per its contract, LCSO will receive a daily fee of $120 per detainee, the revenue from which will be reinvested into law enforcement, jail maintenance and deputy training.
“It will not be used for ongoing expenses,” Kozak said. “We are not housing criminal aliens to make money. We are doing it for national security, public safety and upholding the rule of law.”
Kozak was applauded for his efforts by U.S. Attorney for the District of Wyoming Darin Smith.
“A country is not a country unless it has borders, unless it has laws that are enforced,” Smith said. “Sheriff Kozak gets that, and due to his leadership, once again, Wyoming is setting the standard for law enforcement. Criminal illegal aliens are now on notice: Don’t set up shop in Wyoming.”
Smith promised to support deputies certified under the 287(g) agreement to the full extent of the law.
Three agreements
LCSO has signed all three agreements available to law enforcement, including the Jail Enforcement Model, the Warrant Service Officer model and the Task Force Model.
The majority of deputies were trained under the TFM, which empowers deputies to be a “force multiplier” in “non-custodial settings,” essentially acting as ICE agents outside of the jail, which Kozak intends to use in drug and human trafficking interdiction operations.
“Many times, human trafficking is connected to immigration,” Kozak said. “Let me break it down for you: if you are engaged in human trafficking in Laramie County, you will go to jail. Our priority is to rescue sex trafficking victims.”
Kozak prioritized addressing human trafficking along the Interstate 25 corridor in his previous position as chief of the Cheyenne Police Department, which he said he intends to do again now as sheriff.
According to Kozak, the 287(g) certification will allow deputies to assist victims in pursuing certain visas, though visas are not a part of the 287(g) agreements.
Kozak said that his deputies have been instructed to help victims of human trafficking in pursuing a T visa, which is intended to protect victims of human trafficking. Deputies are also supposed to help domestic violence victims obtain a U visa, which is intended for victims of certain crimes who may be helpful to the investigation or prosecution of criminal activity.
“LCSO is not using the 287(g) program strictly for enforcement,” Kozak said. “We have trained our deputies to help people to do the right thing while protecting our communities from crime.”
Financial strain
In past administrations, 287(g) programs have been heavily criticized for the undue burden they can put on local law enforcement to do ICE’s job.
These agreements have been terminated historically after local departments bear more of the costs than they expected.
At this time, only the daily rate for holding detainees has been solidified. According to Kozak, there has been some communication about possible other reimbursement for costs in the future, but the specifics are unclear.
The Department of Homeland Security and ICE announced in September that starting Oct. 1, agencies participating in 287(g) would have reimbursement opportunities.
ICE stated in that announcement that the agency will fully reimburse participating agencies for the annual salary and benefits of each eligible trained officer, including overtime coverage up to 25% of the officer’s annual salary.
Additionally, law enforcement agencies will be eligible for quarterly monetary performance awards valued up to $1,000 per task force officer.
These will be based on the successful location of undocumented immigrants provided by ICE and overall “assistance to further ICE’s mission to defend the homeland.”
Racial profiling
In the past, TFM agreements have also been terminated following a pattern of discrimination or racial profiling.
Kozak is certain that won’t be the case in Laramie County, despite considerable warning from the American Civil Liberties Union of Wyoming, which sent out a letter earlier this year highlighting cases where communities suffered.
“We affirmed our pledge to obey and enforce the United States Constitution, which prohibits any type of profiling or discrimination based upon race, language, ethnicity or perceived immigration status,” Kozak assured the media on Wednesday.
He added that his policy prohibits immigration sweeps and only allows deputies to inquire about immigration status after a lawful contact.
“My policy prohibits immigration sweeps,” Kozak said. “It does not allow deputies to enter private property, such as schools, churches, homes, businesses or farms, for the sole purpose of immigration enforcement.”
Due to findings of discrimination, ICE has previously significantly reduced the number of TFM agreements. In one 2011 report, the Department of Justice found patterns of discrimination arising from 287(g) programs in Maricopa County, Arizona.
The Maricopa County Sheriff ’s Office was found to “engage in racial profiling of Latinos; unlawfully stops, detains, and arrests Latinos; and unlawfully retaliates against individuals who complain about or criticize MCSO’s policies or practices.”
Kozak assured the media on Wednesday that his policy is different from that of MCSO in 2011. He previously worked at the Mesa County Police Department in Arizona, about an hour and a half drive from Maricopa County.
“They had no limits on their policy, and they wanted to apprehend all kinds of undocumented people,” Kozak said. “Our policy limits our deputies to having a legal contact, requiring a legal contact for a criminal reason to actually stop someone and detain them.”
Each deputy completed training in cultural diversity, profiling, naturalization process, document identification, visas and constitutional standards, according to Kozak.
The sheriff also completed the training, making him one of the few chief law enforcement officials in the country to do so.
“I’m a constitutional sheriff,” Kozak said. “That is the most important thing to me, that our employees, our sheriff ’s office, are first and foremost following the United States Constitution.”
Losing trust
These agreements do have the potential to weaken trust between immigrant communities and law enforcement, regardless of their immigration status.
“That’s always a concern,” Kozak said. “We have several deputies that are bilingual, that are even here today, and so we constantly reach out to those communities to assure them that our goal is to help them.”
Kozak has made several statements that deputies will only look into immigration status following legal contact, not after individuals report tips or call in other crimes.
Regardless of these statements, ACLU Wyoming has informed local law enforcement that the perception alone can severely damage trust.
“Although your responsibilities would vary based on the precise terms of the agreement you make with ICE, the end result would be the same: Your local community’s perception would be that your department is hand-in-glove with ICE, and that every one of your officers or deputies wears a second hat of immigration enforcement,” ACLU Wyoming wrote in a letter earlier this year. “That perception has been shown to undermine community-law enforcement trust, making many community members much less likely to call the police to provide tips, report crimes, and seek needed protection.”
There are now more than 1,000 287(g) program agreements with state and local law enforcement agencies across 40 states, according to a news release from ICE and the Department of Homeland Security.
The release highlighted the agency’s efforts to “supercharge” these agreements and the hiring of additional ICE agents.
This story was published on Oct. 2, 2025.