Current News

/

ArcaMax

Colorado officials have turned over records to ICE four times this year -- including once by mistake

Seth Klamann, The Denver Post on

Published in News & Features

DENVER — Colorado state officials have turned over records requested by immigration authorities at least four times this year — including once by mistake, Gov. Jared Polis’ office said Tuesday.

The state Department of Labor and Employment provided records to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in response to three subpoenas from the agency this year, Polis’ office said. One of those was a request that state officials “erroneously” complied with. The Marijuana Enforcement Division provided records to ICE in response to another request.

That information, newly confirmed to The Denver Post, comes as state agencies have now acknowledged receiving nine immigration-related subpoenas this year from the Trump administration. Whether to comply has stoked political tension internally as well as with immigrant-rights advocates since state law generally prohibits government employees from turning over personal identifying information to ICE.

The exceptions are if the state is ordered to comply by a judge or if the information is sought as part of a criminal investigation.

The state did not turn over records in response to five of the ICE subpoenas received this year, including one that Polis had initially decided to comply with before he was ordered not to by a Denver judge.

Polis spokeswoman Shelby Wieman said in an email that one subpoena sent to the labor department shouldn’t have been complied with. That subpoena sought wage and employment records from an employer whose name was redacted from the document before it was provided to The Post.

“We are implementing procedures to ensure that erroneous sharing does not happen in the future, including elevating any potential responses to (Department of Homeland Security) subpoenas to the Governor’s Office for review and approval,” she wrote.

Wieman did not immediately respond when asked why the agency had complied with the subpoena or if anyone had been disciplined as a result. State law includes civil penalties for any state employee who provides information to ICE unless required by law.

The three subpoenas that Wieman said were correctly fulfilled all involved alleged criminal investigations.

Two were also sent to the labor department. Both were sent to the state in February. One involved an investigation into human trafficking, according to the document, and the other was an investigation related to human and drug trafficking. Both sought employment records from specific companies.

 

The narcotics subpoena stated that the investigation “includes numerous victims from other countries.”

The subpoena sent to the marijuana regulators also sought employment data.

Tuesday’s disclosure, provided by Wieman, is the first time that state officials have acknowledged complying with subpoenas from ICE. The labor department earlier told The Post that it had received four subpoenas; the Colorado Sun reported late last week that the agency had received seven subpoenas.

The marijuana regulatory division and the state Department of Public Health and Environment each received one such request.

But spokespeople for the state had previously refused to turn over the subpoenas or say if they’d complied with them, citing exemptions in state public records law allowing records related to criminal investigations to remain private.

Then, early Friday evening, the labor department released several of the subpoenas it had previously withheld. A spokeswoman for the marijuana enforcement division told The Post this week that it couldn’t turn over the records, shortly before Wieman released the document to The Post and other media outlets.

Wieman and a spokeswoman for the labor department did not immediately respond when asked why the state chose not to respond to the other subpoenas they’ve received from ICE so far this year.

_____


©2025 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit at denverpost.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus