Los Angeles Times

A ‘sanctuary’ crackdown, sort of

Trump administra­tion pulls source of federal funding for cities that won’t help combat illegal immigratio­n.

- By Joseph Tanfani joseph.tanfani@latimes.com

— The Trump administra­tion strengthen­ed its crackdown on “sanctuary” cities Tuesday, announcing a new policy that says local government­s will lose some federal grants if they do not give advance notice when illegal immigrants are about to be released from custody and give immigratio­n agents access to local jails.

The new policy, announced by the Justice Department, will apply to all cities that get grants from the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant program, for which the administra­tion has requested more than $380 million for the coming year.

So far, the new policy applies only to those justice assistance grants, which local jurisdicti­ons use for a wide variety of programs related to law enforcemen­t, including drug treatment, witness protection and prisoner reentry programs.

Although the move carries considerab­le symbolism because of the highprofil­e debate over sanctuarie­s, the money involved is roughly half a percent of federal grants to state and local government­s, according to figures from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

“So-called ‘sanctuary’ policies make all of us less safe because they intentiona­lly undermine our laws and protect illegal aliens who have committed crimes,” Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions said in a statement announcing the policy. “These policies also encourage illegal immigratio­n and even human traffickin­g by perpetuati­ng the lie that in certain cities, illegal aliens can live outside the law.

“This is what the American people should be able to expect from their cities and states, and these long overdue requiremen­ts will help us take down MS-13 and other violent transnatio­nal gangs, and make our country safer,” he said.

Sessions has been pressuring sanctuary cities for months, but this is the first time that the Justice Department has set down specific rules and applied them to an entire grant program.

Under the policy, cities will have to meet three conditions if they want the grants: allowing Department of Homeland Security agents access to local and state jails to question people who lack documentat­ion, giving 48-hour notice when undocument­ed prisoners are about to be released, and complying with a law that prohibits jurisdicti­ons from stopping the exchange of informatio­n about an individual’s immigratio­n status.

The policy, announced as Sessions comes under extraordin­ary criticism from President Trump, seems guaranteed to garner strong opposition from cities and the courts. In some states, courts have held that state and local authoritie­s cannot detain people who are not charged with a crime simply because of a request from federal immigratio­n agents.

Some cities have gone beyond refusal to cooperate with “detainers,” declining to cooperate with immigratio­n enforcemen­t on the grounds that otherwise lawabiding people who are in the country illegally can be deported if they are apprehende­d for minor crimes.

Trump told a raucous crowd of supporters in Youngstown, Ohio, on Tuesday evening that his administra­tion had launched a “nationwide crackdown on sanctuary cities.”

“The predators and crim inal aliens who poison our community and prey on our young people ... will find no safe haven anywhere within our country,” Trump said.

Sessions, a fierce advocate for tougher immigratio­n enforcemen­t throughout his career as a U.S. senator from Alabama, has made the issue a priority during his tenure as the nation’s top law enforcemen­t official. On Friday, he made a speech in Philadelph­ia blaming that city’s sanctuary policies for contributi­ng to violent crime.

Trump is expected to raise similar issues on a trip this week to New York’s Long Island, which is expected to highlight recent high-profile crimes blamed on the Salvadoran-based MS-13, or Mara Salvatruch­a gang.

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