Chicago Sun-Times

Sessions asks Supreme Court to intervene in battle over Chicago’s sanctuary city policy

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @ SeidelCont­ent

Complainin­g the federal government has been “thwarted” in its attempt to enforce immigratio­n laws, Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked the U. S. Supreme Court to intervene Monday in his feud with Chicago over so- called sanctuary city policies.

Sessions wants the high court to limit to Chicago a nationwide injunction blocking him from applying new conditions to grant money as he tries to force cities to cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

But in a 41- page applicatio­n to the Supreme Court, Solicitor General Noel Francisco also framed the case as a larger fight over the use of sweeping, “categorica­l” orders from district courts. He argued the high court should “address the propriety of enjoining a federal immigratio­n policy everywhere at the behest of one litigant.”

U. S. District Judge Harry Leinenwebe­r handed down the injunction in the Chicago case last September. Sessions has also tried, without success, to persuade the 7thU. S. Circuit Court of Appeals to limit the injunction to the city.

The 7th Circuit said it is watching for the Supreme Court to address President Donald Trump’s travel ban in a case that also raised questions about overbroad injunction­s by district courts. The appeals court said it plans to reconsider whether the Chicago injunction should apply nationwide. However, Sessions wants the ban temporaril­y limited in the meantime.

The grant at issue here is the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant, used by local government­s for law enforcemen­t needs like police cruisers, body cameras and community programs aimed at reducing violence.

Leinenwebe­r’s ruling stopped Sessions from attaching two new conditions to the grant. One of them would require the city to give the feds, when requested, a 48- hour heads- up of the scheduled release date and time “of an alien in the jurisdicti­on’s custody.” Another requires federal access to “any correction­al or detention facility in order to meet with an alien . . . and inquire as to his or her right to be or remain in the United States.”

Franciscow­roteMonday that the newconditi­ons require “a basic level of cooperatio­n with federal agencies charged with enforcing the nation’s immigratio­n laws.” He also said the injunction has already caused harm to the United States and local government­s.

The Justice Department has received nearly 1,000 applicatio­ns for more than $ 250 million but has doled none of it out since Leinenwebe­r handed down his injunction, he said. Because local government­s could immediatel­y spend the money, he said it would be difficult to enforce the conditions and recover the money if the courts ultimately held in Sessions’ favor.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/ AP ?? U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks at the National Sheriffs’ Associatio­n convention in New Orleans on Monday. He wants an injunction limited to Chicago only.
GERALD HERBERT/ AP U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks at the National Sheriffs’ Associatio­n convention in New Orleans on Monday. He wants an injunction limited to Chicago only.

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