Baltimore Sun

Judge limits grants for immigratio­n policing

- By Michael Balsamo

LOS ANGELES — A federal judge issued a nationwide injunction Thursday barring the U.S. Justice Department from giving priority status for multimilli­on-dollar community policing grants to department­s that agree to cooperate with immigratio­n officials.

The ruling came after Los Angeles, a sanctuary city, filed a request for the injunction.

“This is yet another dagger in the heart of the administra­tion’s efforts to use federal funds as a weapon to make local jurisdicti­ons complicit in its civil immigratio­n enforcemen­t policies,” Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer said.

The Justice Department did not comment on the ruling.

The federal COPS Hiring Program awards more than $98 million to police department­s across the country to hire more officers for community policing.

In September, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said department­s could receive additional points in the applicatio­n process by agreeing to fully cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s. Sessions has defended the policies as necessary to help fight illegal immigratio­n. He has said that cities that don’t help enforce immigratio­n law are endangerin­g public safety.

Los Angeles was not awarded one of the grants in 2017. It alleged in seeking the injunction that the Justice Department has oversteppe­d its authority and violated the constituti­on by linking the money to cooperatin­g with immigratio­n authorizes.

In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Manuel Real said the conditions would “upset the constituti­onal balance” by forcing police to Sessions said some cities are endangerin­g the public. participat­e in immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

The Los Angeles Police Department has routinely applied for the grant. The department was awarded $3.1 million in 2016 and $16.8 million between 2009 and 2012, police Chief Charlie Beck said.

The Justice Department wanted Los Angeles police to provide access to city jails, share technical informatio­n about investigat­ions and allow access to informatio­n about arrestees, Beck said.

Many cities in the country have implemente­d sanctuary laws as a way to focus law enforcemen­t officers on local crime rather than detaining people suspected of being in the country illegally.

 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS/EPA ??
MICHAEL REYNOLDS/EPA

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