Attorney General Sessions steps up
anti-'sanctuary' rhetoric after setbacks
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[September 20, 2017]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - U.S. Attorney General Jeff
Sessions stepped up the Trump administration's critique of so-called
sanctuary cities on Tuesday, saying local and state policies to limit
cooperation with immigration enforcement are a criminal's "best friend."
Sessions' remarks, at a gathering of law enforcement authorities in
Portland, Oregon, came days after repudiation of his stance against the
sanctuary movement in separate actions by a federal judge in Chicago and
the California legislature.
The judge in Chicago on Friday barred the Justice Department from
withholding public safety grants to cities unless they allowed U.S.
immigration authorities unlimited access to local jails and provided 48
hours' notice before releasing individuals sought for deportation.
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On Saturday, California lawmakers voted to make California a sanctuary
state, approving a bill barring local governments from forcing
undocumented immigrants to spend extra time in jail just to allow
immigration agents to take them into their custody.
But under a compromise negotiated with Governor Jerry Brown, the bill
allows local police to notify the federal government if they have
arrested an undocumented immigrant with a felony record. It also allows
immigration agents access to local jails.
Sessions called on local jurisdictions that have sought to shield
illegal immigrants from deportation efforts to reconsider, and he urged
Brown not to sign the California bill into law.
President Donald Trump and his administration have insisted that the
deportation crackdown is aimed at illegal immigrants convicted of
serious crimes, and that sanctuary measures contribute to rising crime.
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U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions looks on during a news
conference at the Justice Department in Washington, DC, U.S. on July
20, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein/File Photo
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"Such policies undermine the moral authority of law and undermine
the safety of the jurisdictions that adopt them," Sessions said.
"That makes a sanctuary city a trafficker, smuggler or gang member's
best friend."
He cited cases in Oregon and California in which illegal immigrants
were charged with committing violent crimes after being arrested for
relatively minor offenses by local police and then released, despite
federal requests to keep them in custody.
Sanctuary supporters counter that enlisting police cooperation in
deportation actions undermines community trust in local law
enforcement, particularly among Latinos, and they question whether
Trump is really targeting dangerous criminals.
"We're not soldiers of Donald Trump or the federal immigration
service," Brown said in a CNN interview on Tuesday. He called the
measure passed by California's legislature "a well-balanced bill."
Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler said in a letter to Sessions that Oregon
state law dating back to 1987 prohibits state and local police from
enforcing federal immigration law.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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