Lodi News-Sentinel

San Francisco defends sanctuary status as backlash mounts

- By Paul Elias and Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO — The attacks on San Francisco and other cities with similar immigratio­n policies began moments after a jury acquitted a Mexican man of killing a woman on a popular pier, some calling for a boycott of the city that fiercely defends its reputation as a refuge for all.

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 that bar cooperatio­n with federal deportatio­n efforts.

Twitter users turned to the hashtags #BoycottSan­Francisco and #kateswall to demand constructi­on of the U.S.-Mexico border wall that Trump has called for. Conservati­ve politician­s and celebritie­s such as former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and actor James Woods lambasted the city as unsafe.

City officials vowed to stand behind their “sanctuary city” policy. It’s what led Jose Ines 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 and was wanted for a sixth.

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

Sanctuary policies improve public safety by allowing immigrants to cooperate with police without fear, said state Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democratic former San Francisco supervisor.

“This family has been through hell, but there are people, including our president, who continue to use this tragedy to demonize immigrants and to slander immigrants by suggesting they are all criminals, and that is not true,” he said Friday.

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

Since then, the city consistent­ly has been an early adopter of some of the most immigrant-friendly policies nationwide, and it takes pride in serving as a safe place for religious and gender minorities, non-English speakers and people in the country illegally. Hundreds of other cities have similar immigratio­n policies.

A judge did not allow immigratio­n politics into the courtroom for Garcia Zarate’s trial.

San Francisco Deputy District Attorney Diana Garcia urged jurors to convict Garcia Zarate of first-degree murder, saying he had come to the pier with a gun and a desire to hurt someone.

His attorneys argued that he found a gun wrapped in cloth under a chair on the pier and it fired when he picked it up.

Jurors rejected charges of murder and involuntar­y manslaught­er but did convict Garcia Zarate of being a felon in possession of a firearm, which carries a maximum sentence of three years in jail. It’s likely he will have served long enough behind bars considerin­g his time in custody.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t said it would “ultimately remove” Garcia Zarate from the country.

During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, then-candidate Trump and others pointed to Steinle’s death as reasons why the country’s immigratio­n laws should be tightened.

Trump called the verdict “disgracefu­l” and posted on Twitter that “the Kate Steinle killer came back and back over the weakly protected Obama border, always committing crimes and being violent, and yet this info was not used in court.”

“His exoneratio­n is a complete travesty of justice. BUILD THE WALL,” Trump tweeted.

Garcia Zarate’s conviction­s were immigratio­n and drugrelate­d but he had no record of violence.

Former President Barack Obama had kept his Republican predecesso­r’s policy of allowing U.S. immigratio­n officials to ask local police to detain people suspected of living in the country illegally for up to 48 hours.

Garcia Zarate had finished a federal prison sentence for illegal re-entry into the United States 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.

Federal officials got an arrest warrant for Garcia Zarate days after the shooting, which they say was a violation of his supervised release on the illegal re-entry conviction. A judge unsealed that warrant Friday.

Michael Cardoza, a longtime San Francisco Bay Area lawyer, said the prosecutor overreache­d in asking for a first-degree murder conviction, which would have meant that Garcia Zarate intended to kill Steinle despite strong evidence that the bullet ricocheted around 90 feet before striking her.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States