Local Government TV

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Beitler on ICE: Two Things Can Be True

When seeking truth, two things can be true at the same time.

Yes, folks can and should have real concerns about how U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operates in American cities right now. And yes, it can still be a mistake to cut off a successful relationship between county government and federal law enforcement that helped combat human trafficking and other serious crimes in Lehigh County.

I share concerns about due process, reduced training and recruitment standards, and a sense that enforcement is not focused on those with serious criminal records. Recent reporting shows training for new Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers has been shortened, with recruits completing less instruction than in the past and many struggling with basic standards or being placed into field roles before full training was finished. Law enforcement training experts outside the agency have raised questions about preparedness and use of force protocols. I think most agree law enforcement should be held to the highest standards. These issues deserve serious discussion and stronger policies to protect civil rights, including the rights of American citizens who could be falsely accused. But turning a lease decision into a claim that all cooperation with the Department of Homeland Security harmfully oversimplifies a complex picture.

What also is true is that intergovernmental partnerships with DHS have helped our local community confront the brutal reality of human trafficking, a serious and ongoing problem in our region that preys on vulnerable people and destroys lives. Our geography makes us particularly vulnerable. The question should be about local realities. Reality is, there is no local evidence that HSI here has operated outside its criminal investigative function from this county office. What got lost in the politics is the real work happening here at home. The human trafficking task force in Lehigh County, created under an agreement unanimously approved by a bipartisan board, brought together local law enforcement, medical professionals, social service providers and federal investigators to target traffickers while supporting survivors. After a very political press event led to a rushed decision to evict the investigators, I heard directly from survivors, nurses, advocates and local law enforcement about how critical the partnership has been. Real cases and real lives were protected because agencies worked together.

Counties are not immigration policy makers. We are service providers. Our job is to protect residents, support victims and keep our communities safe. That means setting clear local boundaries on how county resources are used, being transparent with the public and, when needed, holding partners accountable. It does not mean dismantling partnerships that work because national politics are heated. When we shift into politics over objectivity we weaken our ability to focus on the core responsibilities our residents rely on us to deliver.

It’s important to understand. DHS includes many different functions. For example, airport security through TSA. We would certainly not suggest evicting TSA from LVIA over immigration policy disputes. The same principle of distinguishing roles should apply to all federal partnerships. Put yourself in the shoes of a victim of trafficking and ask what makes you safer, political theater or maintaining real investigative resources?

Leadership should not make unilateral decisions without engaging stakeholders. Unfortunately, I believe that happened here. Conversely, I’ve learned through conversations with local service providers that victims do not report crimes directly to federal agencies. They come through hospitals, shelters, advocates and local police first. Federal partners are brought in later when cases require broader investigative tools that local agencies alone do not have. My perspective comes from listening to the people who work closest to victims and who see the consequences of hasty decisions in real time. The consistent theme I heard was not about politics, but about making sure survivors continue to have safe entry points and that frontline workers have access to the tools needed to stop traffickers. Claims that victims will not seek help because of federal perception overlook how victims actually enter the system and how investigations work in practice.

To the survivors who have reached out, law enforcement officers, medical professionals, nonprofit leaders I’ve spoken with, and others now working with one less important tool, I am sincerely sorry that county leadership has failed you.

Two things can be true at once. Effective local governance should not be about headlines or national political battles. Here at home? It should be about objectivity. Yes, we can and should demand accountability, insist on due process and set firm local guardrails. But we can do this without weakening known partnerships that protect victims of trafficking and other serious crimes. We should set limits without breaking the tools that protect the most vulnerable. We should talk to stakeholders before holding press conferences. Ending this partnership does not change federal immigration policy, but it does change whether local investigators, medical providers and survivor advocates have access to the tools they were using to go after traffickers. That is what responsible local government looks like, and it requires an independent, nonpartisan, fact driven perspective focused on outcomes, not party lines.

Ron Beitler is an Independent Lehigh County Commissioner.

33 comments:

  1. Do we really think the Federal government under Trump is functioning in an ethical manner? So many more undocumented workers in FL and TX and the focus is on MN and PA. Is this really about presidential contenders? Why not focus on Southern States where there are vastly more undocumented? Do I want local law enfroce.w t to focus on gang bangers, traffickers, and dealers....Yes. do I want them to be involved with rallying up families for political hostages...No.

    Id take a working immigrant over a J6er any day.

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    1. ICE actually IS operating in both FL and TX.

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    2. And not being obstructed as in the other "problem" states. Just saying.

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  2. Why then, were they not paying their rent?

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  3. Neither siegel or pinsley can hold a candle to Ron Beitler

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  4. Hopefully when the 4-year nightmare of siegel is over Ron will run for exec. Then we will have integrity and honesty in Lehigh county.

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  5. It appears Mr. Beitler should some of the spare time he uses to write this drivel to find a proper barber. Appearance matters in important elected positions.

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    1. How silly you are

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    2. Your statement is a violation of the CROWN Act. Report yourself to the PC Division of the Thought Police.

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    3. Like the style. Are you just jealous perhaps?

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  6. Fear mongering has rapidly taken over America. Baseless scare tactics used now in 99% of America, actually. Why? Because the matter of removing dangerous and costly, illegal entrants to this nation is being used as a political weapon against the current Federal Administration. Meaning, President Trump.

    Unless you are now involved in a crime here, or have been involved, maybe even arrested at your previous home, there is NO reason to live your daily life in fear. No reason to carry around on your person any “papers” to proven your immigration status.

    ICE activities are occurring everyday in dozens of communities throughout this nation. That’s as it should be, a GOOD thing. We hear most accusations of police overreach coming out of the highly dysfunctional administrative State of Minneapolis under Gov. Walz, and particularly Minneapolis. There’s a political reason for that, too. But, that’s a story of shocking details still being developed, and a topic for another day.

    Never forget, news and information delivery in America today is being politically weaponized. No source, be that television, radio, newspapers, independent journalists, blogs, etc., can be trusted as fully accurate and truthful. We citizens are literally all in our own now.

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  7. I have to respectfully disagree. Most actors and popular singers have declared that ICE is murdering innocent people, including babies. Has Beitler spoken with these stars? Doubtful.

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    1. Believing the words of "most actors and popular singers is even more ridiculous than believing the media, podcasters and so-called influencers.

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    2. @ 10:06 A.M. Right. How ridiculous is that.

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  8. Look in the mirror Lehigh voters. You earned the havoc pinsley and siegal will create with their lies and smoke and mirrors.

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  9. I repeat, why were the rent payments stopped?

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    1. Rent can't be charged on stolen land. I'm coming over to squat in your house. I hope the fridge is full.

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    2. Anon 9:35am

      The rent was NEVER "stopped". Nor was this a case of DHS "refusing to pay". And this wasn't somenhow recently "discovered" either. The whole press conference narrative was built for headlines and left out MANY key facts.

      What actually occurred was a bureaucratic breakdown. The original lease documentation had been signed by an individual within DHS who did not have proper authorization to do so. Once that error was identified, the agreement had to be reviewed by the county Department of Law, which paused processing (and therefore payments) while the paperwork was corrected. During that time negotiations continued. The feds sought to specify minutia and detailed facility requirements. This is reality of working with the feds. A kind of federal compliance layering that's exhibit A why projects tied to Washington become overly complex and costly.

      Again - At NO POINT was the lease payment disputed. The matter was moving toward resolution with full payment under the prior administration.

      In a sense, this IS a damning indictment of the federal government, just not in the way it has been portrayed. (Again, the feds NEVER refused to pay)

      It is less a story about refusal or bad faith and more a case study in bureaucratic incompetence. The truth was way more boring than what was spun for a snappy headline for folks trying to parlay county government into higher positions. 

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    3. Actually, it’s more of a story of incompetence on the part of the county administration. I didn’t know the county had so much extra money on hand that they could turn away a princely sum from the federal government, when the federal government is helping solve the human trafficking problem for the county.

      Maybe instead of forgoing that extra cash, they should rent the space to the feds, collect the back rent, and then rebate that to the taxpayers.

      You know, kind of help with the housing affordability issue they’re always talking about.

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  10. Ron, you have a career as a real news reporter when you tire of the politics. Thx for the response!

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  11. Generally speaking, in America right now, the news media (various types) is the ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE. I honestly do not believe this will be fixed in my lifetime. But, I’m rather old.

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  12. Here’s the one most important truth.

    No one not accosting ICE officers has been touched, pepper sprayed, arrested, or shot.

    Should be fairly simple to avoid self inflicted contact.

    Unless of course you want it.

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  13. I watched a Democrat political candidate from Texas make this statement on CNN yesterday.

    “Trump is sending ICE agents into our cities to shoot people.”

    The statement wasn’t questioned or challenged. The media is the problem.

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    1. Perhaps it's because what was said is accurate. Trump is sending ICE and Border Patrol to our cities, and two people have been shot dead under questionable circumstances. I know of several other shootings. This is to say nothing of people who have been ripped from their cars when they were not even participating in a protest. I am sure that there are antagonists among the protestors, including Pretti and Good, but they should never have been shot. Nor should the first response of an ICE agent be to shoot paper spray directly into someone's face. They are out of control.

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    2. Roll eyes. Done with this silly blog. You need meds Bernie. Your obsession is making look unhinged.

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    3. Well gaslighting is kind of their thing.

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    4. Bernie. Ice. Police officers. Are human beings. None of us are perfect. I'm sure there are good and bad in all professions. However ICE and police have a split second to make a decision in a potentially violent situation. A situation you and I have never faced. They have used immense restraint with what they deal with daily. I can not and should not ever judge. Especially when I have not been in the position to make a split second decision like they make every day trying to protect us. The law protects those split second decisions based on threat and multiple items involved in any decision to use force. God bless all who serve and protect us.

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    5. 11:07, I'll agree with you that we are all human beings and we all make mistakes. I'll agree that these are split-second decisions. I'll disagree that tremendous restraint was used for Good or Pretti. In Pretti's case, Border Patrol actually approached Pretti, shoved a woman to the ground, and without hesitation sprayed pepper spray directly into his face. This was not tremendous restraint. These guys were actually escalating what already was a volatile situation. It was all wrong, and I suspect these two officers will both be charged. In Good's case, she had put her car in reverse and the wheel was actually pointing away from the officer, who never should have been in front of her vehicle. The officer fired, probably bc he had been dragged by a car not long before this.

      Renee Good should not have blocked the street. Pretti never should have had a handgun in any situation dealing with law enforcement. But neither should have been killed. I have said before on several occasions that ICE is out of control. They need better training. They need to stop sweeps and engage in targeted enforcement. They need to stop using chock holds and carotid restraints. They need to drop quotas. After you shoot someone in the face, don't call her a "fu--in' bitch." Don't refuse to allow a physician to examine a woman who is bleeding out and who had a pulse for 18 minutes after she was shot. And recognize that Americans tend to resent what is perceived as an occupation force. Understand that we have first amendment rights. This is not a police state, nor will it ever be.

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    6. And there we have it. Bernie agrees that Trump is sending ICE agents into cities to “shoot people.”

      That’s the mission. That’s the goal.

      If Trump is sending ICE into cities to shoot people, I’d expect the death count to be in the tens of thousands, so by your logic we are in agreement that ICE is bad at their jobs. Or maybe just needs more time at the gun range.

      While I appreciate that you provide a forum for debate and expression of thought, I think I finally realize just how sick and bereft of common sense you really are.

      Unbelievable.

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  14. Ron, respect you. Are you being too easy on yourself in this case? You state the commissioners were aware of this MOU breech before the current administration brought it to the public light. You promote yourself as both an “independent” and “third-party” advocate (presumably in an effort to elevate your status as a spokesperson somehow), but are you complicit in any way in letting this issue ride for the last 3 years? Is your admiration for Armstrong/Molchany that strong?

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  15. 8:12PM has a point. If you want to be viewed as a thought-leader, get out in front of issues. Don’t let others label you as “Lead from Behind Beitler”which is how you’re coming across to many at this point.

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  16. Every other post is ICE now. Enough already we get it.

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You own views are appreciated, especially if they differ from mine. But remember, commenting is a privilege, not a right. I will delete personal attacks or off-topic remarks at my discretion. Comments that play into the tribalism that has consumed this nation will be declined. So will comments alleging voter fraud unless backed up by concrete evidence. If you attack someone personally, I expect you to identify yourself. I will delete criticisms of my comment policy, vulgarities, cut-and-paste jobs from other sources and any suggestion of violence towards anyone. I will also delete sweeping generalizations about mainstream parties or ideologies, i.e. identity politics. My decisions on these matters are made on a case by case basis, and may be affected by my mood that day, my access to the blog at the time the comment was made or other information that isn’t readily apparent.