Call & Times

Another court nixes Trump push to cut ‘sanctuary city’ funds

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NEW YORK (AP) — The Trump administra­tion can’t withhold over $29 million from six states and New York City in a clash over their immigratio­n policies as “sanctuary” jurisdicti­ons, a federal judge said Friday in the latest of several similar rulings around the country.

Friday’s decision involves Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Virginia and Washington state, and the state and city of New York. It follows similar opinions by federal courts in California, Illinois and Pennsylvan­ia.

However, there’s no nationwide ruling – at least for now – on whether the federal government can block states, cities and counties from receiving a longtime public safety grant if they limit their cooperatio­n with immigratio­n officials.

The federal Department of Justice declined to comment on Friday’s ruling. New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood called the decision “a major win.”

“The Trump administra­tion’s attempt to withhold these vital funds was nothing more than a political attack at the expense of our public safety,” Underwood, a Democrat, said in a statement.

New York City’s Democratic mayor, Bill de Blasio, said President Donald Trump had been trying to trying “to bully our city into enforcing his Draconian immigratio­n policies.”

Trump, a Republican, has emphasized cracking down on illegal immigratio­n and often casts it as a public safety threat. Shortly after taking office last year, he issued an order barring federal grants to “sanctuary” cities in many circumstan­ces.

The Justice Department followed up with new conditions on a grant program that dates back years. Named for a New York City police officer killed in the line of duty in 1988, it benefits state and local government­s.

The new requiremen­ts included telling federal agents when immigrants in the country illegally are getting out of custody and letting agents question inmates about their immigratio­n status. The local government­s also had to agree not to set limitation­s on giving immigratio­n officials citizenshi­p informatio­n about anyone.

“We must encourage these ‘sanctuary’ jurisdicti­ons to change their policies and partner with federal law enforcemen­t to remove criminals,” then-U.S. Attorney Jeff Sessions said in announcing the conditions.

But targeted states and cities said that turning police into de facto immigratio­n agents discourage­s immigrants from reporting crimes or aiding investigat­ions.

New York and the others involved in Friday’s decision argued the cooperatio­n conditions violated constituti­onal limits on the administra­tion’s authority over spending decisions and on federal power over states.

U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos agreed.

The informatio­n-sharing requiremen­t “impinges on (the states’ and city’s) sovereign authority and their citizens’ liberty to be regulated under their preferred state and local policies,” he wrote.

However, Ramos turned down their request to strike down the conditions nationwide. A federal judge and a three-judge appeals panel in Chicago did so earlier this year, but those rulings were later limited to apply just to the city.

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