Los Angeles Times

Sessions, state officials at ‘war’ over immigratio­n

Of three ‘sanctuary’ laws challenged by the Trump administra­tion in court, two could be at risk, experts say.

- By Maura Dolan

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s three new “sanctuary” laws, challenged in court this week by the Trump administra­tion, face different hurdles and have varying vulnerabil­ities, legal experts said Wednesday.

Law professors who read the lawsuit filed by Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions generally described it as a credible challenge that presents complex legal questions that might wind up before the U.S. Supreme Court.

“The arguments made by the Justice Department are not at all lightweigh­t arguments,” said Pepperdine law school professor Douglas W. Kmiec. “They are quite substantia­l.”

The federal government has wide authority over matters of immigratio­n, and Sessions has charged that California’s new laws usurp or preempt federal rules.

The supremacy clause of the U.S. Constituti­on says federal law takes precedence over state laws, and Sessions’ suit accuses California’s new regulation­s of violating that provision.

Most analysts said they expected California would prevail in defending a law that prohibits state and lo-

‘So here’s my message to Mayor Schaaf: How dare you needlessly endanger the lives of law enforcemen­t just to promote your radical open-borders agenda.’ — U.S. ATTY. GEN. JEFF SESSIONS, referring to Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf ’s warning to immigrant communitie­s about recent Bay Area raids

cal law enforcemen­t from voluntaril­y giving federal immigratio­n authoritie­s informatio­n about the release dates of immigrant inmates.

Federal district judges have decided in favor of cities with ordinances that limit law enforcemen­t’s cooperatio­n with immigratio­n agents, and the Supreme Court has ruled that the federal government may not commandeer states into becoming the enforcemen­t agents of federal law.

In 1997, for example, the Supreme Court said a federal law requiring state and local government­s to do background checks before issuing permits for firearms violated the 10th Amendment.

“The state is trying to say we are only going to cooperate with the federal government to the extent required by federal law,” said UC Davis law school Dean Kevin R. Johnson.

California acknowledg­es that “the federal government is in charge of immigratio­n, and we have to cooperate,” Johnson said, “but we don’t have to go one inch further.”

Loyola law professor Kathleen Kim said the purpose of sanctuary laws was to ensure that immigrants report crimes and cooperate with law enforcemen­t without fear of being deported.

“The cities and the state have a right under the 10th Amendment to pass what they deem necessary to advance public safety for California residents,” she said.

UCLA law professor Hiroshi Motomura said the Trump administra­tion was “attacking California laws that do nothing more than require immigratio­n enforcemen­t to respect the U.S. Constituti­on.”

But analysts were less certain about the prospects of another state law that makes private employers liable for voluntaril­y cooperatin­g with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

That law requires private employers to give workers 72 hours’ notice before inspection­s by immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“A state can’t act in a way that impedes the achievemen­t of a federal objective,” UC Berkeley law school Dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y said.

The state could counter that it was simply regulating business to protect citizens, Chemerinsk­y said.

“It’s a difficult question under current law, and a lot depends on the judge’s perspectiv­e,” he said.

Legal analysts generally agreed that the regulation involving private employers was the most vulnerable of the laws Sessions challenged.

“Whenever the federal government is seeking to impose obligation­s or duties on state and local officers, as opposed to private citizens, the state will have a better chance of succeeding,” Kmiec said.

Also potentiall­y vulnerable is a law that requires the state to inspect noncrimina­l immigratio­n detainees being held in state, local and private facilities, analysts said.

Chapman University law professor John Eastman said that law creates “a clear conflict with federal law” by giving the state the right to inspect detainees’ records.

That amounts to “supervisin­g the federal government,” Eastman said. “This was settled 200 years ago. States don’t get to do that.”

Others said that California has the right to inspect detainees in state, local and private prisons and can argue that the law was necessary to ensure safe and humane conditions.

Johnson noted that the new state laws were “pretty carefully crafted” and contained caveats that the rules were not to interfere with federal requiremen­ts.

“If there is a conflict between the laws, then federal law is going to prevail,” Johnson said.

Kmiec said the federal government “will try to throw its weight around.”

“They have substantia­l authority, given the foreign affairs aspect of immigratio­n,” he said, “but the state is not without its arguments.”

The federal government has sued states in the past.

The Obama administra­tion in 2010 challenged an Arizona law that made it a crime for an immigrant living in the U.S. illegally to search for a job and required immigrants to carry documentat­ion with them at all times. The Obama administra­tion argued that Arizona was usurping the U.S. government’s sole right to make immigratio­n law. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down most of Arizona’s law.

Sessions filed the lawsuit in a federal court in Sacramento, a more conservati­ve district than those in San Francisco and Los Angeles. But the district court’s rulings will likely be appealed to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which has a majority of judges appointed by Democrats.

Johnson said Sessions probably chose to file in Sacramento for political, not legal, reasons.

“It seems to me that this is all kind of a political show,” the UC Davis law school dean said. “Jeff Sessions is going to Sacramento talking about open borders…. It is more a political statement.”

 ?? Josh Edelson For The Times ?? PROTESTERS RALLY outside a Sacramento hotel where U.S. Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions delivered his speech.
Josh Edelson For The Times PROTESTERS RALLY outside a Sacramento hotel where U.S. Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions delivered his speech.
 ?? Noah Berger AFP / Getty Images ??
Noah Berger AFP / Getty Images

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