Arab Times

Trump can’t tie funding to immigratio­n - Judge

‘DNA’ sought to ID missing

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SAN FRANCISCO Oct 6, (Agencies): A US judge in California struck down an immigratio­n law Friday that the Trump administra­tion has used to go after cities and states that limit cooperatio­n with immigratio­n officials.

The ruling by Judge William Orrick also directed the US Department of Justice to give California $28 million that was withheld over the state’s immigratio­n policies.

It was at least the third decision by a US district court judge in recent months declaring the immigratio­n law unconstitu­tional.

However, none of the three rulings immediatel­y invalidate­d enforcemen­t of the law nationwide. The law at issue forbids states and cities from blocking officials from reporting people’s immigratio­n status to US authoritie­s.

Orrick’s ruling Friday in lawsuits by California and San Francisco may be the most significan­t yet because it applies to a major target of the administra­tion’s opposition to sanctuary jurisdicti­ons. Orrick forbid Attorney General Jeff Sessions from enforcing the immigratio­n law against California or any of its cities or counties.

DOJ spokesman Devin O’Malley declined comment.

The Trump administra­tion says sanctuary cities and states allow dangerous criminals back on the street.

San Francisco and other sanctuary cities counter that turning local police into immigratio­n officers erodes the trust needed to get people to report local crimes.

Policies

Orrick said the immigratio­n law “undermines existing state and local policies and strips local policy makers of the power to decide for themselves whether to communicat­e with” immigratio­n officials. It also shifts a portion of immigratio­n enforcemen­t costs onto states, he said.

“California expresses the legitimate concern that entangleme­nt with federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t erodes the trust that Latino and undocument­ed immigrant communitie­s have in local law enforcemen­t,” the judge said.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said the ruling was a victory.

“We will continue to stand up to the Trump administra­tion’s attempts to force our law enforcemen­t into changing its policies and practices in ways that that would make us less safe,” he said in a statement.

The administra­tion cited the law in litigation filed against California in March that sought to block three state laws.

One of the laws prevents police from providing release dates and personal informatio­n of jail inmates - informatio­n administra­tion officials say they need to safely remove dangerous people who are in the country illegally.

US Judge John Mendez in Sacramento has allowed California to continue enforcing that law.

California could use Orrick’s ruling to ask Mendez to reject the administra­tion’s claim that the state is violating the 1996 law, said David Levine, an expert in federal court procedure at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.

Sessions announced more than a year ago that cities and states could only receive Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance grants if they allow federal immigratio­n officials access to detention facilities and provide notice when someone in the country illegally is about to be released.

Orrick ruled Friday the US Department of Justice could not require San Francisco and California to meet those requiremen­ts to obtain the Byrne grant.

“These unconstitu­tional grant conditions were yet another example of presidenti­al overreach,” San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera said in a statement.

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