Lodi News-Sentinel

Sheriff tells Trump: California sanctuary laws are a ‘disgrace’

- By Franco Ordonez

WASHINGTON — The Fresno sheriff looked across the table toward President Donald Trump and asked him for direction and clarity.

Sheriff Margaret Mims told the president that California’s sanctuary laws have put sheriffs like herself in “an untenable position,” caught between conflictin­g state and federal laws.

“It’s a disgrace,” Mims said about her department’s inability to work with federal agents..

Mims joined a group of more than 15 local law enforcemen­t officials, lawmakers and administra­tion officials from California, including Stanislaus County Sheriff Adam Christians­on and El Dorado Sheriff John D’Agostini for a roundtable discussion with Trump, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and ICE Director Thomas Homan on their opposition to California’s sanctuary state policies.

In February, the Trump administra­tion filed suit against a California law that restricts how and when state law enforcemen­t can interact with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s. The administra­tion has been highly critical of the state laws describing them as “radical” policies that endanger the lives of local law enforcemen­t and the immigrant communitie­s themselves.

Sessions promised that prosecutio­ns of criminal immigrants would likely double. Homan pushed back against criticism that the administra­tion was hurting immigrant families. Homan said sanctuary laws allow criminal immigrants to return back to immigrant communitie­s where they can prey on the vulnerable.

“You’re not protecting immigrant communitie­s,” Homan said to a roomful of like-minded people. “You’re putting them at greater risk,” he said.

Several of the lawmakers present, including Republican­s House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Supervisor Kristin Gaspar of San Diego County — who is vying to replace Rep. Darrell Issa in Congress — took digs at California Gov. Jerry Brown and the California legislatur­e for failing to stand up for the Constituti­on.

“We’ve created a situation where Governor Brown makes San Diego a great place to commit a crime because you can either be across the border in a matter of minutes and shielded by Mexico or you have the option of staying put,” Gaspar said.

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