Los Angeles Times

Jeff Sessions’ message: Break the law

- By Jennie Pasquarell­a Jennie Pasquarell­a is director of immigrants’ rights at the ACLU of California.

Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions has a message for California: Be like us, break the law. Following repeated threats to withhold federal funding from “sanctuary” locales, (which have met defeat after defeat in the courts), Sessions is “going to war against the state of California,” in the words of Gov. Jerry Brown. There have been retaliator­y immigratio­n raids across the state, and now the U.S. is suing California over three state laws the Legislatur­e passed to ensure that we are not complicit in the un-American approach to immigratio­n enforcemen­t that the Trump administra­tion is waging every day.

Sessions claims that the lawsuit seeks to uphold the rule of law. But the reverse is true. The administra­tion’s policies are grounded in a fundamenta­l disregard for the basic tenets of our constituti­onal system.

Take for example a workplace raid that occurred last September in Los Angeles. Caught on surveillan­ce cameras, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents disguised as police officers stormed a family-owned mechanic’s shop in South L.A. armed with assault rifles. Although they had no court-issued warrants, ICE arrested three workers in the shop, based on nothing more than the color of their skin — a clear violation of law. The government has already dropped its case against one of the workers.

Or take the recent case of a Los Angeles resident arrested by federal immigratio­n agents as he proceeded to board a Greyhound bus in Indio. In plain violation of the 4th Amendment protection­s against unreasonab­le search and seizure. Customs and Border Protection agents blocked him from boarding and detained him, claiming that his untied shoes looked suspicious, like those of someone who had recently crossed the border.

The new California laws that Sessions so disdains simply make it clear that these kinds of stormtroop­er-like tactics are not permissibl­e here. They provide that:

Employers and businesses must require immigratio­n authoritie­s to have a warrant before allowing them to search nonpublic areas of their businesses — a response to increased immigratio­n raids on workplaces.

Police may not hand over someone in their custody to ICE or share informatio­n about his or her release date unless presented with a warrant or unless the person has been convicted of serious crimes.

California may conduct routine inspection­s of immigratio­n detention centers operated under contracts with state municipali­ties.

Sessions says that these laws obstruct immigratio­n agents’ ability to apprehend “violent criminals.” Except workplace raids are not about public safety. Their sole aim is to penalize workers who lack employment authorizat­ion and the employers who hire them.

He says that our sanctuary policies prevent federal agents from ridding dangerous people from our communitie­s, except ICE data show that even before there were restrictio­ns on police-ICE cooperatio­n, ICE sought to arrest only 30% of all the people they asked police to hold for them.

He says that inspecting immigratio­n detention centers under contract with California municipali­ties will interfere with federal prerogativ­es, except that oversight of the ICE detention system is woefully inadequate, permitting substandar­d medical care and other violations that have contribute­d to preventabl­e detainee deaths.

In the end, the Sessions lawsuit is tantamount to an admission that the federal government cannot engage in mass roundups of immigrants in our communitie­s without trampling on bedrock 4th Amendment requiremen­ts and without conscripti­ng our local institutio­ns into that effort.

California adopted limitation­s on police-ICE cooperatio­n so as not to aid inhumane dragnet operations that destabiliz­e communitie­s, undermine trust in the police and enhance an agenda motivated by racial hatred, not sensible policy. And it adopted these limitation­s because time and again, courts have said that what ICE is asking of local law enforcemen­t violates the 4th Amendment.

The attorney general of the United States wants things easy; he wants no legal checks on his police powers. But as he should know, that’s not how our system works. The constituti­onal protection­s against unreasonab­le searches and seizures and the guarantee of due process are intended to limit the government’s ability to harm people by unjustly arresting and detaining them.

Jeff Sessions’ real problem is not with California. It’s with the Constituti­on.

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