The Welland Tribune

Chicago stands against Trump

Mayor says city won’t be blackmaile­d into changing values by Trump administra­tion

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MICHAEL TARM and SOPHIA TAREEN

CHICAGO — Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Chicago is taking his fight against U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies to court, becoming one of the first cities Monday to sue the government for what many U.S. cities argue are illegal bids to withhold public safety grants from so-called sanctuary cities.

The 46-page lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago, a day after Emanuel announced the litigation and said the city won’t “be blackmaile­d” into changing its values as a welcoming city. He argued it’s unconstitu­tional for a city “to be coerced on a policy.”

Chicago officials say there are new qualificat­ions for a grant that requires cities to share informatio­n with U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s, which they allege are unconstitu­tional. Chicago has received the grant funds since 2005, including $2.3 million last year. They were used for buying police vehicles, radios and SWAT equipment.

“These new conditions — which would give federal officials the power to enter city facilities and interrogat­e arrestees at will and would force the City to detain individual­s longer than justified by probable cause, solely to permit federal officials to investigat­e their immigratio­n status — are unauthoriz­ed and unconstitu­tional,” the complaint read. “These new conditions also fly in the face of longstandi­ng City policy that promotes co-operation between local law enforcemen­t and immigrant communitie­s, ensures access to essential city services for all residents, and makes all Chicagoans safer.”

Those grant amounts of money are relatively small, but Chicago leaders say they fear more impactful restrictio­ns could be coming and so they hope to establish in court that such government measures are illegal.

It is the latest round in a battle between several major U.S. cities that opt to limit co-operation with federal government efforts to enforce immigratio­n law and the Trump administra­tion, with federal officials threatenin­g for months to withhold funding for sanctuary cities, saying they don’t comply with federal laws.

Last month, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said local government­s would lose the money if they do not give advance notice when immigrants in the country illegally are about to be released from custody. He also wants immigratio­n agents to have access to local jails. He has argued that the policy makes everyone safer.

Chicago has been a sanctuary city since the 1980s, beefing up its policies in the past decade, particular­ly since Trump took office.

The city prohibits police from providing federal Immigratio­n and Customs officials access to people in police custody, unless they are wanted on a criminal warrant or have serious criminal conviction­s. Local police are also barred from allowing ICE agents to use their facilities for interviews or investigat­ions and from responding to ICE inquiries or talking to ICE officials about a person’s custody status or release date.

Authoritie­s contend the policy helps encourage residents of the immigrant community to inform police when they are victims of crimes.

The lawsuit, which names Sessions, seeks to remove the immigratio­n-related conditions for the grant applicatio­ns.

When asked for comment about the lawsuit Monday, the Department of Justice spokesman directed The Associated Press to Sessions’ previous comments, including those saying sanctuary cities threaten safety.

“It’s especially tragic that the mayor is less concerned with that staggering figure than he is spending time and taxpayer money protecting criminal aliens and putting Chicago’s law enforcemen­t at greater risk,” said department spokesman Ian D. Prior in an e-mail.

Emanuel and other city leaders have rejected that the city’s policies protect immigrants with criminal records who are living in the U.S. without legal permission. Leaders of several sanctuary cities and counties, including in Chicago, have also dismissed such statements linking immigrants and crime as discrimina­tory and misleading.

“The rhetoric and the threats from this administra­tion embodied in these new conditions imposed on unrelated public safety grant funds are breeding a culture and a climate of fear within the communitie­s in our city,” Edward Siskel, the head of City Hall’s legal department said at the courthouse after the lawsuit was filed.

In March, the Justice Department sent letters to officials in California and major cities including New York, Chicago, Philadelph­ia and New Orleans, all places the Justice Department’s inspector general has identified as limiting the informatio­n local law enforcemen­t can provide to federal immigratio­n authoritie­s about those in their custody.

The department warned that the administra­tion will punish communitie­s that refuse to co-operate with efforts to find and deport immigrants in the country illegally. But some of the localities remained defiant, despite risking the loss of funds that police agencies use to pay for everything from body cameras to bulletproo­f vests.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel says Chicago will keep fighting U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies with a federal lawsuit alleging it is illegal for the federal government to withhold public safety grants from so-called sanctuary cities.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel says Chicago will keep fighting U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies with a federal lawsuit alleging it is illegal for the federal government to withhold public safety grants from so-called sanctuary cities.

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