Los Angeles Times

Trump’s plan to defund ‘sanctuary’ cities blocked

Order that called for withholdin­g federal funds is rejected.

- By Maura Dolan and Joel Rubin

A federal judge placed a nationwide hold Tuesday on President Trump’s order to strip funds from municipal government­s that refuse to cooperate fully with immigratio­n agents.

U.S. District Judge William H. Orrick III, a President Obama appointee based in San Francisco, said Trump’s Jan. 25 order, directed at so-called sanctuary cities and counties, was unconstitu­tional.

“The Constituti­on vests the spending powers in Congress, not the president, so the order cannot constituti­onally place new conditions on federal funds,” Orrick wrote.

The case was the first legal test of Trump’s order, which has left cities and counties across the nation fearful of losing massive amounts of federal funds.

The Trump administra­tion said it would appeal the decision to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which already is considerin­g Trump’s revised moratorium on travel from six predominan­tly Muslim countries.

White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, speaking to reporters in his West Wing office, said the decision “will be overturned eventually, and we’ll win at the Supreme Court level.”

“It’s the 9th Circuit going bananas,” Priebus said, though the ruling came at the district court level.

Tuesday’s ruling

stemmed from lawsuits by San Francisco and Santa Clara County challengin­g the order. Among other claims, the suits argued that the directive violated the 10th Amendment, which protects states from federal government interferen­ce.

The Trump administra­tion had argued the counties lacked standing or legal authority to challenge the order because they had not yet suffered any harm.

But Orrick said a preliminar­y injunction to block the order was needed to prevent upheaval in the counties’ budgeting process.

“The order has caused budget uncertaint­y by threatenin­g to deprive the counties of hundreds of millions of dollars in federal grants that support core services,” the judge said.

He stressed that his decision will not prevent federal officials from designatin­g local municipali­ties as sanctuarie­s or from enforcing existing conditions on grant money.

The ruling flatly rejected a last-minute bid by a lawyer for the Justice Department to downplay the significan­ce and reach of Trump’s order.

The government’s attorney told the judge during an April 14 hearing that the order would affect only limited law enforcemen­t grants handed down by the Justice Department and the Office of Homeland Security — not all of the billions in funding local municipali­ties receive from the federal government.

That “new interpreta­tion” of the sanctuary order was “not legally plausible,” the judge said.

The wording of the order — and statements made by Trump and Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions — make clear it was intended to threaten all federal funds, the judge said.

“If there was doubt about the scope of the order, the president and attorney general have erased it with their public comments,” Orrick wrote. “The president has called it ‘a weapon’ to use against jurisdicti­ons that disagree with his preferred policies of immigratio­n enforcemen­t.”

Orrick also noted that the federal government may not legally compel counties to hold inmates who are in the country illegally in jail beyond their release dates.

Counties that do detain immigrants until federal agents can take them face liability under the 4th Amendment’s guarantee of freedom from seizure.

But Trump’s order can be read as requiring states and municipali­ties to honor such detainer requests to avoid being designated sanctuary jurisdicti­ons, Orrick said.

The judge said the order ran afoul of the Constituti­on in various ways, violating the separation of powers doctrine, guarantees of due process and the 10th Amendment right of states and cities to self-govern.

The federal government “cannot use the spending power in a way that compels local jurisdicti­ons to adopt certain policies,” Orrick wrote, citing a Supreme Court ruling against part of Obamacare.

He described Trump’s order as vague. It “has caused substantia­l confusion and justified fear among states and local jurisdicti­ons that they will lose all federal grant funding at the very least,” he wrote.

A spokesman for the Justice Department said the administra­tion will follow the law “with respect to regulation of sanctuary jurisdicti­ons” and enforce existing grant conditions.

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee said the city would continue to be a sanctuary jurisdicti­on.

If the federal government believes a serious criminal should be detained, it can obtain a criminal warrant, he said. The city has always honored them.

“We know that sanctuary cities are safer, healthier, more productive places to live,” Lee said.

Dave Cortese, president of the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s, declared that “the politics of fear has just suffered a major setback.”

“Millions of people across the country can continue to receive essential medical care, go to school and remain active members of their communitie­s without fear that their local government­s are being forced to work against them,” Cortese said.

Cities and counties around the nation have reacted differentl­y to Trump’s order.

The mayor of MiamiDade County immediatel­y directed jail officials to honor all requests by immigratio­n agents because he said he feared the county could lose $355 million a year in federal funding.

Santa Clara County officials had argued that the order threatened $1.7 billion in annual federal funding. San Francisco said it stands to lose at least $1.2 billion a year.

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