Albuquerque Journal

Court upholds ‘detainers’

Texas jails told to honor federal deportatio­n holds

- BY PAUL J. WEBER ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas for now can require law enforcemen­t to honor federal immigratio­n requests to detain people in local jails for possible deportatio­n under a new “sanctuary cities” law supported by the Trump administra­tion, a federal appeals court ruled on Monday.

The decision prompted one notable critic of the immigratio­n crackdown, Travis County Sheriff Sally Hernandez, to announce that her Austin jails would now honor all detainers from U.S. Immigratio­ns and Customs Enforcemen­t. The elected Democrat had become a polarizing figure after announcing on the day of President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on that the county’s jails would no longer comply with all such requests.

But the unanimous ruling of a threejudge panel in New Orleans wasn’t seen as so clear-cut by others. Some lawyers said they believed the decision did not demand total compliance with federal agents, while other local officials struggled to interpret the ramificati­ons.

Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton hailed it as a clear victory allowing the state to “enforce the core” of the law known at Senate Bill 4.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling negates some of U.S. District Judge Orlando Garcia’s Aug. 31 halt to much of the law one day before it was to go into effect. The decision lets Texas enforce the detainer provision, pending fuller oral arguments in November.

“We are pleased today’s 5th Circuit ruling will allow Texas to strengthen public safety by implementi­ng the key components of Senate Bill 4,” Paxton said in a statement.

Major cities such as Houston, Dallas and Austin had sued the state, saying the measure was unconstitu­tional and warning that it would have a chilling effect in immigrant communitie­s.

Nina Perales, an attorney for the Mexican American Defense and Legal Education Fund who is also representi­ng the cities of San Antonio and El Paso, said the ruling appeared to leave wiggle room for interpreta­tion.

“I don’t read this decision as making all detainers mandatory,” she said.

Hernandez said her policies had been updated to comply with the latest ruling and that she looked forward to “further clarificat­ion” from the courts. Her spokeswoma­n, Kristen Dark, said the changes mean that Travis County jails will now honor all detainer requests.

Jose Garza, an attorney for the Mexican American Legislativ­e Caucus, acknowledg­ed that the state now potentiall­y had room to pursue penalties against chiefs or sheriffs who don’t comply.

The Republican push to pass the law roiled the Texas Legislatur­e throughout the spring. One GOP legislator notified federal immigratio­n agents about protesters who held signs saying they were illegal and told a Democratic colleague who pushed him during an argument, that he would shoot in self-defense.

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has praised the Texas law and the Justice Department filed arguments in support of it, as did several attorneys general from other states.

The law’s opponents argue it violates the Fourth Amendment by requiring police to detain people suspected of illegal immigratio­n without probable cause. They also say it illegally puts local police in the federal role of immigratio­n enforcemen­t officers and is unconstitu­tionally vague as to exactly when a local law enforcemen­t officer would be in violation of the law.

Supporters of the state law say immigratio­n officials have already determined probable cause when they seek to have local officials detain someone. They also argue that federal and local officials have a long history of cooperatio­n.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters in San Antonio, Texas, in late June rally against a bill that would force law enforcemen­t officials to honor immigratio­n detention requests.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters in San Antonio, Texas, in late June rally against a bill that would force law enforcemen­t officials to honor immigratio­n detention requests.

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