Los Angeles Times

U.S. SUES STATE OVER ITS MIGRANT POLICIES

Justice Department is challengin­g three California laws it says help shield immigrants from deportatio­n.

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion, seeking to force a defiant California to cooperate with its agenda of stepped-up immigrant deportatio­ns, went to federal court Tuesday to invalidate three state laws — the administra­tion’s most direct challenge yet to the state’s policies.

Administra­tion officials say the three laws in question, all passed by the Legislatur­e last year, blatantly obstruct federal immigratio­n law and thus violate the Constituti­on’s supremacy clause, which gives federal law precedence over state enactments.

“The Department of Justice and the Trump administra­tion are going to fight these unjust, unfair, and unconstitu­tional policies that are imposed on you,” Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions plans to tell a meeting of the California Peace Officers Assn. in Sacramento on Wednesday, according to excerpts of his remarks released by the Justice Department.

“We are fighting to make your jobs safer and to help you reduce crime in America. And I believe that we are going to win.”

The laws make it a crime for business owners to voluntaril­y help federal agents find and detain undocument­ed workers, prohibit local law enforcemen­t from alerting immigratio­n agents when detainees are released from custody, and create a state inspection program for federal immigratio­n detention centers.

Administra­tion officials, who briefed reporters before the suit was filed, said other states that were pursuing laws similar to California’s were also likely to be tar-

geted in court.

The suit, which administra­tion lawyers filed late Tuesday in federal court in Sacramento, considerab­ly raises the tension between the administra­tion and the most populous state in the country. California officials consistent­ly have sought to stymie Trump’s efforts to impose policies incompatib­le with the more permissive vision of the state’s leaders and the liberal leanings of its electorate.

Many state and local officials in California say the administra­tion’s stepped-up deportatio­n efforts are making communitie­s less safe and underminin­g local economies.

The case will test the power of the Trump administra­tion to force California police department­s and local government­s to cooperate with deportatio­ns and other aggressive enforcemen­t actions targeting people who entered the country illegally or overstayed their visas. It ref lects the administra­tion’s limited tolerance for states’ rights when states want to go in a sharply different direction than the administra­tion.

In a statement, Gov. Jerry Brown called the federal suit a “stunt.”

“At a time of unpreceden­ted political turmoil, Jeff Sessions has come to California to further divide and polarize America,” he said. “Jeff, these political stunts may be the norm in Washington, but they don’t work here. SAD!!!”

California officials were preparing for the suit even before it was filed. After the Justice Department announced Sessions would be making a major announceme­nt in Sacramento, state leaders expressed confidence that Washington’s legal attacks would fail.

“We’ll see what the courts say,” said Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, a former legislativ­e leader.

“So far the administra­tion’s record there is not stellar,” he said, referring to the administra­tion’s repeated losses in court. “We didn’t pass these laws to protect people with serious criminal background­s. We are protecting our communitie­s from immigratio­n agents intimidati­ng people and overreachi­ng in very serious ways.”

State Senate leader Kevin de León struck a similar note: “If U.S. Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions is suing California because we refuse to help the Trump administra­tion tear apart honest, hardworkin­g families, I say bring it on. Based on the U.S. Department of Justice’s track record in court, I like our odds.”

The administra­tion, however, could be in a stronger position in this case than in previous court battles over immigratio­n issues, including court rulings against early versions of Trump’s travel ban and against efforts to cut off some federal money to cities with so-called sanctuary policies.

In many other cases, the administra­tion has been trying to swiftly unravel or reshape well-establishe­d environmen­tal, workplace or immigratio­n regulation­s that were grounded in years of case law or voluminous ad- ministrati­ve proceeding­s. In this case, it is California that is arguably in uncharted legal territory, imposing barriers aimed at underminin­g federal law enforcemen­t efforts.

Administra­tion officials charge that the state measures not only hinder their ability to carry out federal law, but also put immigratio­n agents and communitie­s at risk.

The suit includes a declaratio­n from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t Acting Director Thomas Homan, who said that the inability of ICE officers to go to local lockups to pick up immigrants who have been detained by local police agencies forces them to hunt down suspects in more dangerous settings.

SB 54, one of the three challenged state laws, prohibits state and local police agencies from notifying federal officials in many cases when immigrants potentiall­y subject to deportatio­n are about to be released from custody.

When the law was under considerat­ion in the Legislatur­e, former Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr., who headed the Justice Department in the Obama administra­tion and now represents the state Senate, wrote a letter defending the measure’s constituti­onality. The federal government has the authority to enforce its immigratio­n laws, but doesn’t have the power to draft California officials into helping, he said.

California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra said Tuesday that the state would use a similar argument to defend its law in court.

“We are doing what we believe is best to make sure the people of California are safe,” he said. “We are doing nothing to intrude on the work of federal government to do immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“When people feel confident to come forward to report crimes in our communitie­s or participat­e in policing efforts without fear of deportatio­n, they are more likely to cooperate with the criminal justice system.”

Justice Department officials cited several instances in recent weeks in which they said the new law prevented federal immigratio­n agents from taking custody of people arrested for serious crimes.

Officials in Ventura County, for example, refused to turn over a suspect arrested for sexual abuse of a minor, they said. A request to transfer custody of a cartheft suspect was declined by Sacramento County jail officials, and Alameda County jail officials refused to turn over a convicted drug dealer arrested for felony drug possession while armed, they said.

State officials say those suspects are the exception and do not reflect those the law is designed to protect, who are primarily people jailed for low-level offenses.

California officials have been unflinchin­g in enforcing the new laws, despite warnings from the Trump administra­tion that they would create a confrontat­ion.

In January, Becerra put employers on notice that they would be prosecuted if they did not follow the state’s new Immigrant Worker Protection Act, AB 450, which prohibits businesses from voluntaril­y sharing informatio­n about workers with federal immigratio­n agents. The law also requires that employers alert workers if their records are going to be inspected by federal officials.

Business owners who voluntaril­y assist with federal immigratio­n operations will face fines of up to $10,000, Becerra warned. The Trump administra­tion lawsuit says state officials have acknowledg­ed that such threats are designed to frustrate immigratio­n enforcemen­t actions and that the law puts private businesses in an impossible situation: They are being required by the state to rebuff federal agents.

The third law under challenge, AB 103, imposes state inspection­s on federal detention facilities. The measure passed in response to reports of rampant mistreatme­nt and abuse in federal detention facilities, many of which are run by private companies that act as federal contractor­s.

Since the law took effect, the state has been conducting inspection­s at the facilities and demanding access to inmate documents that the administra­tion says the state has no authority to review.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? ATTY. GEN. Jeff Sessions says California immigratio­n policy is “unjust, unfair, and unconstitu­tional.”
Susan Walsh Associated Press ATTY. GEN. Jeff Sessions says California immigratio­n policy is “unjust, unfair, and unconstitu­tional.”

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