Cities dubbed immigrant 'sanctuaries' hit
back on Trump funding threat
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[July 07, 2017]
By Mica Rosenberg and Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Department of
Justice is reviewing letters from 10 local jurisdictions that said they
are in compliance with U.S. immigration law, to determine whether to cut
federal funding, officials said Thursday, heating up a dispute between
so-called sanctuary cities and President Donald Trump's administration.
In April, the department had asked a handful of states and cities to
document by June 30 their compliance with a statute that says local
governments cannot prevent their employees from sharing information with
U.S. immigration officials.
The Trump administration has said jurisdictions that do not fully
cooperate are shielding "criminal illegal aliens," and has promised to
crack down on cities that do not comply. The sanctuary jurisdictions say
they are following the law and do not want to spend local resources on
immigration enforcement.
"It is not enough to assert compliance, the jurisdictions must actually
be in compliance," U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a
statement on Thursday. He said the 10 jurisdictions had written in with
"alleged compliance information" and that the government would "examine
these claims carefully."
Sessions' statement said "some of these jurisdictions have boldly
asserted they will not comply with requests from federal immigration
authorities." If the government finds the cities are violating the
statute, known as Section 1373, it could decide to cut federal funds.
In the letters seen by Reuters, the jurisdictions say they are following
the law even though some do not honor all "detainer" requests sent by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE.) A "detainer" asks local
authorities to hold people in jail up to 48 hours beyond when they are
set to be released so immigration officials can take them into custody.
Many of the letters noted that compliance with detainer requests is
voluntary and is not required under the statute. The jurisdictions
targeted are the states of California and Connecticut, Chicago and Cook
County in Illinois, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Las Vegas, Miami,
Milwaukee and New York.
At least one of the jurisdictions – Nevada's Clark County, which is
dominated by Las Vegas – has a long-standing formal agreement with ICE
in which local police officers help with federal immigration
enforcement.
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immigrant supporters protest during the Los Angeles City Council ad
hoc committee on immigration meeting in Los Angeles, California,
U.S., March 30, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
New York City said it complies with detainer requests for people who
have been convicted of certain "violent or serious" crimes, so long as
the request is accompanied by a judicial warrant. Like other cities, New
York said its priority is creating trust between immigrant communities
and local police to encourage residents, even if they are living in the
country illegally, to report crimes.
Mitchell Landrieu, the Mayor of New Orleans made a similar argument
in a letter to Sessions. He said the administration has erroneously
characterized sanctuary cities as havens for Central American gangs.
Landrieu said an audit of gangs in New Orleans did not find a single
Latino-dominated group.
"Undocumented people who commit violent crimes must face the
criminal and immigration legal systems of this country. But that
does not mean that all people are illegal immigrants that are part
of violent gangs," Landrieu wrote.
Milwaukee County Executive Chris Abele called the Justice
Department's statement on Thursday "inflammatory."
The county is at risk of losing more than $6 million in revenue if
the Justice Department follows through, a June 28 letter from its
lawyers said. It said Milwaukee would "avail itself of all legal
options available" to "protect its grant funding."
Trump's executive order early in his presidency pledging to cut
funding to sanctuary cities has been challenged in the courts. In
April, a federal judge in San Francisco said in a case brought by
Santa Clara county that cities were likely to succeed in proving
Trump's order unconstitutional.
The California county wrote in a court filing on Thursday that top
administration officials have repeatedly stated that federal funding
should be tied to local willingness to honor ICE detainer requests.
(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg and Jonathan Allen in New York;
additional reporting by Dan Levine in San Francisco; editing by
Grant McCool)
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