Chicago proposal would end sanctuary status for those who commit certain 
		crimes
		
		 
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		 [January 10, 2025]  
		By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square 
		
		(The Center Square) – Two Chicago aldermen have proposed eliminating 
		sanctuary-city protections for foreign nationals convicted of or 
		arrested for certain crimes. 
		 
		Aldermen Raymond Lopez and Silvana Tabares say their proposed amendment 
		to the Welcoming City Ordinance would allow the city to work with 
		federal immigration officers. Lopez said the measure would only apply 
		when an individual has been arrested for or convicted of gang crimes, 
		drug crimes, prostitution-related activities such as human trafficking, 
		or sex crimes involving minors. 
		 
		“The goal of this amendment to our Welcoming City Ordinance is to keep 
		people safe: to keep our citizens safe and to keep the undocumented, who 
		are just following the law and awaiting their time until they can 
		legalize their status, safe by removing those individuals who are here 
		choosing, with emphasis on ‘choosing,’ to engage in certain, specific, 
		illegal activities here in the city of Chicago,” Lopez told The Center 
		Square. 
		 
		Alderwoman Julia Ramirez said she is strongly opposed to the amendment, 
		citing the potential for the Chicago Police Department to collaborate 
		with federal immigration officials. 
		 
		“In particular, it would involve CPD to coordinate with ICE, which is 
		quite contradictory of the reason for having a sanctuary city,” Ramirez 
		told The Center Square. 
		 
		Ramirez said the proposal is not a new one. 
		
		
		  
		
		“This has been happening for the last two years, and they’ve never 
		wanted to be in collaboration about preventative measures that have most 
		likely led to this situation now,” Ramirez said. 
		 
		One of her concerns, Ramirez said, was that the amendment would not 
		necessarily protect people who are not dangerous. 
		 
		“There are very specific line items of things that people are accused of 
		doing,” Ramirez said. 
		 
		In a joint statement posted on X, Lopez and Tabares said the current 
		ordinance is dangerous to law-abiding undocumented and non-citizen 
		residents. 
		 
		“We believe that the best way to protect law-abiding non-citizens from 
		the returning Trump Administration is by working with them in 
		apprehending their priority targets: non-citizens that CHOOSE to engage 
		in dangerous, illegal activity once they are in the United States. Our 
		current WCO prohibits any coordination or cooperation, even in the most 
		heinous situations,” the statement read. 
		 
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            “This policy is dangerous to those law-abiding undocumented and 
			non-citizens residents because, if someone is arrested or convicted 
			of crimes, the federal authorities aren’t notified. Should the 
			federal government go looking for those specific individuals seeking 
			to deport them, there is a high probability that other targets, 
			law-abiding undocumented and non-citizen residents, may be 
			apprehended and deported as collateral damage. That is an entirely 
			unacceptable yet avoidable situation,” Lopez and Tabares continued. 
			 
			“We are not concerned with the political theatrics of returning 
			President Trump or Mayor [Brandon] Johnson. Our goal is to protect 
			those that deserve our protection: those undocumented and 
			non-citizen residents of Chicago that follow the law and contribute 
			positively to our city while waiting for a path out of the shadows. 
			This amendment to the WCO, which is narrow in scope and specific on 
			when it can be activated, will keep those individuals safe while 
			maintaining the spirit of our city’s history and immigrant 
			traditions,” the two aldermen concluded. 
			 
			Gov. J.B. Pritzker has vowed to protect noncitizen immigrants in 
			Illinois after President-elect Trump takes office, but said felons 
			should be evicted from the country.  
			 
			“Someone who is not a U.S. citizen and entered this country without 
			any documentation or permission, people who commit violent crimes 
			who are in that category shouldn't be here,” Pritzker said.  
			 
			Lopez said he believes Chicago should be welcoming to immigrants, 
			but this is a decent compromise for all sides. 
			 
			“I think we can all agree that criminals are not something that we 
			want more of in our country, in our cities and in our 
			neighborhoods,” Lopez told The Center Square. 
			 
			Lopez and Tabares plan to call the measure for a vote next week. 
			 
			Kevin Bessler contributed to this 
			story. 
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