The News (New Glasgow)

Lawsuit against California echoes Arizona immigratio­n fight

- BY SUDHIN THANAWALA

The Trump administra­tion’s lawsuit against California over state laws aimed at protecting immigrants makes the same argument the Obama administra­tion made when it went after an Arizona law that sought to crack down on people in the country illegally: The power to regulate immigratio­n lies primarily with the U.S. government.

But legal experts say the two states’ laws are fundamenta­lly different, so the claim that states can’t control immigratio­n may not carry as much weight in the lawsuit announced by U.S Attorney Jeff Sessions.

Sessions is challengin­g three California laws, including one that requires the state to review detention facilities where immigrants are held and another that bars law enforcemen­t from providing release dates for people in jail and their personal informatio­n.

“The lawsuit against California is not going to be decided on the general, broader claim that immigratio­n is exclusivel­y the purview of the federal government,” said Pratheepan Gulasekara­m, a professor at Santa Clara University School of Law who studies state immigratio­n regulation­s.

Federal officials say they need the kind of informatio­n California has blocked to take custody of people in the country illegally who are dangerous and need to be removed. The Trump administra­tion often points to the case of Kate Steinle – a San Francisco woman who was shot and killed in 2015 by a Mexican man who had been deported five times – as an example of the need for tougher immigratio­n laws.

“The provisions of state law at issue have the purpose and effect of making it more difficult for federal immigratio­n officers to carry out their responsibi­lities in California,” the U.S. Department of Justice’s lawsuit against California claims.

California Democrats passed the laws in response to Trump’s promises to sharply ramp up deportatio­ns of people living in the U.S. illegally.

The administra­tion has tried to block funding from so-called sanctuary cities and states and has clashed particular­ly hard with California, which has resisted President Donald Trump on issues including marijuana policy and climate change and defiantly refuses to help federal agents detain and deport immigrants.

Sessions ramped up the fight with the announceme­nt of his lawsuit Wednesday in a speech just blocks from the California state capitol.

State officials say their sanctuary policies increase public safety by promoting trust between immigrant communitie­s and law enforcemen­t and they vowed to vociferous­ly defend them in court. Holly Cooper, co-director of the immigratio­n law clinic at the University of California, Davis, said the state would have a strong argument that federal officials are violating the U.S. Constituti­on by coercing it into using its resources for immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

The U.S. Constituti­on gives states the right to determine how to enforce public safety and the federal government can’t overrule those decisions, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said at a news conference on Wednesday accompanie­d by Gov. Jerry Brown.

“We’re not trying to enact immigratio­n laws. We’re enacting public safety laws,” he said. “The Trump administra­tion doesn’t like that, but we’re not trying to get into their business. They’re trying to get into our business.”

Brown said California had “drawn the proper line between what the state has competency to do and what is the overriding federal supremacy.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Graduate student Steven Lynn holds up a sign during a protest against U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who was speaking to the California Peace Officer Associatio­n meeting in Sacramento, Calif.
AP PHOTO Graduate student Steven Lynn holds up a sign during a protest against U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who was speaking to the California Peace Officer Associatio­n meeting in Sacramento, Calif.

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