Imperial Valley Press

Judge disputes Calif. aimed to hinder border enforcemen­t

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — After repeatedly suing the Trump administra­tion over U.S. immigratio­n policies, California found itself in an unusual position Wednesday: defending state protection­s for people in the country illegally against a court challenge by the federal government.

The Justice Department wants U.S. Judge John Mendez to block three California laws, with government attorney Chad Readler saying it was clear they were passed to obstruct federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“I’m not that clear and that convinced,” said Mendez, who called the hearing a question-and-answer session that could last several hours. He was not expected to rule immediatel­y.

California has been a leader in opposing Trump administra­tion policies, filing more than 50 lawsuits, mostly over immigratio­n and environmen­tal decisions, and notching some significan­t court victories. The administra­tion has fought back, sparring with the state’s Democratic leaders and criticizin­g their so-called sanctuary policies.

Outside the courthouse in California’s capital city, scores of people protested U.S. immigratio­n policies. Some carried signs that said “Keep Families Together” and “Family Separation is UnAmerican,” referring to the administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy on illegal border crossings that has separated children from their families.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday ending the separation­s but not the policy that prosecutes all adults caught crossing illegally.

One of the laws the U.S. is targeting requires the state to review detention facilities where immigrants are held. Another bars law enforcemen­t from providing release dates and personal informatio­n of people in jail, and the third bars employers from allowing immigratio­n officials on their premises unless the officials have a warrant.

California officials say their “sanctuary” policies promote trust between immigrant communitie­s and law enforcemen­t. The administra­tion’s lawsuit says the three laws allow dangerous criminals on the street.

The laws, two of which went into effect in January, follow Trump’s promises to ramp up deportatio­ns.

The administra­tion has tried to crack down on sanctuary jurisdicti­ons by restrictin­g funding if they refuse to help federal agents detain and deport immigrants.

California, which this year became the second “sanctuary state,” has resisted that move.

The federal government argues in its lawsuit that the U.S. Constituti­on gives it pre-eminent power to regulate immigratio­n, and California can’t obstruct immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts. It says the law on detention facility inspection­s could lead private contractor­s to stop holding immigrants, which the state disputes.

Mendez asked an attorney for California why the inspection law was necessary and whether it discrimina­ted against federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

State attorney Christine Chuang said the California attorney general wanted to “shed some light on” a particular set of detention facilities.

Mendez asked Readler, the government attorney, how a state review of such facilities would affect federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Readler said it’s up to U.S. officials to detain and house immigrants, and states have no role in inspection­s.

In challengin­g the other state laws, federal officials say they need inmate informatio­n to safely take custody of people in the country illegally who are dangerous and need to be removed. The restrictio­n on accessing businesses eliminates a “critical enforcemen­t tool” to fight illegal employment, they say.

California officials argue that the administra­tion is trying to assume powers that have long been understood to belong to states and cannot show that the state’s policies are causing harm.

There is no evidence that the law barring release dates and personal informatio­n is causing more dangerous immigrants to be freed, the state said in court documents.

It notes that the law restrictin­g access to work sites explicitly authorizes compliance with inspection­s of employment records to make sure employees are allowed to work in the U.S.

 ??  ?? State Sen. Kevin de Leon, D-Los Angeles, speaks at demonstrat­ion outside the federal courthouse where a federal judge will hear arguments over the U.S. Justice Department’s request to block three California laws that extend protection­s to people in the...
State Sen. Kevin de Leon, D-Los Angeles, speaks at demonstrat­ion outside the federal courthouse where a federal judge will hear arguments over the U.S. Justice Department’s request to block three California laws that extend protection­s to people in the...

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