Austin American-Statesman

Acquittal of migrant raises conservati­ve ire

San Francisco mayor defends role as a ‘sanctuary city.’

- By Paul Elias and Janie Har

Trump, Sessions rail against “sanctuary cities” after jury clears undocument­ed Mexican man in 2015 San Francisco slaying.

The attacks on San Francisco and other cities with similar immigratio­n policies began moments after a jury Thursday acquitted a Mexican man charged with killing a woman on a popular pier.

President Donald Trump called the verdict a “complete travesty of justice,” and U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions demanded cities like San Francisco scrap immigratio­n policies barring cooperatio­n with federal deportatio­n efforts.

Thousands of Twitter users turned to the hashtag #BoycottSan­Francisco. Conservati­ve politician­s and celebritie­s such as former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and actor James Woods ripped the city.

City officials pushed back and vowed to stand behind their so-called sanctuary city policy. It’s what led Jose Garcia Zarate to be released from San Francisco’s jail despite a federal request to detain him for deportatio­n several weeks before Kate Steinle was fatally shot in the back in 2015. He had been deported five times before.

“San Francisco is and always will be a sanctuary city,” said Ellen Canale, a spokeswoma­n for Mayor Ed Lee.

It was among the first U.S. cities to establish a sanctuary law in 1989 as part of a national wave of cities adopting policies to help Central American refugees.

Hundreds of cities have similar policies, which Trump, Sessions and others blame for Steinle’s death.

Prosecutor­s had charged Garcia Zarate with murder, assault and being a felon in possession of a firearm. He called the shooting an accident. He said he found a gun under a chair on the pier and it fired when he picked it up.

San Francisco Deputy District Attorney Diana Garcia urged jurors to convict him of first-degree murder. Jurors also considered and rejected second-degree murder and involuntar­y manslaught­er.

They did convict him of the firearm charge, which carries a maximum sentence of three years in prison. U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t said it would “ultimately remove” Garcia Zarate from the country.

Before the shooting, he had finished a federal prison sentence for illegal re-entry into the U.S. and had been transferre­d to San Francisco’s jail in March 2015 to face a 20-year-old charge for selling marijuana. The sheriff ’s department released him a few days after prosecutor­s dropped the marijuana charge, despite a request from federal officials to detain him for deportatio­n.

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