Los Angeles Times

Immigratio­n enforcemen­t isn’t L.A.’s job

The LAPD shouldn’t be pressured by the Trump administra­tion into becoming a satellite arm of ICE.

- Fter a series of

Avictories in their fight against the Trump administra­tion’s draconian war on immigratio­n, Los Angeles and other so-called sanctuary cities lost a battle last week: An appellate court ruled that the Justice Department may give preference in awarding grants to police department­s that agree to help the federal government catch and deport immigrants.

The decision is troubling. For one thing, it rewards President Trump’s myopic focus on immigratio­n to the exclusion of other critical public safety issues. And it could embolden his administra­tion in its efforts to bully local police into enforcing immigratio­n law, which is solely a federal responsibi­lity.

Worse, the decision upholds rules that essentiall­y require cities to undermine their own proven public safety strategies in order to improve their chances of obtaining federal dollars for public safety. The Los Angeles Police Department, which serves a large immigrant population, long ago recognized that if people living in the country illegally view local cops as immigratio­n agents, they are less likely to report crimes or cooperate in investigat­ions. That is dangerous.

The case stems from a lawsuit filed by Los Angeles City Atty. Mike Feuer in 2017 challengin­g new rules for the federal government’s long-standing Community Oriented Policing Services, or COPS grant program, which provides money to hire police officers. The Justice Department announced it would give extra points in the new scoring criteria to agencies that said they would use the money to help with the “control of illegal immigratio­n.” Agencies also got bonus points if they committed to giving federal authoritie­s access to local jails so they could interview people in custody to determine if they are in the country illegally, and 48-hour notice before releasing them.

Feuer argued that the criteria conflicted with Los Angeles Police Department policies. The city’s detention facilities rarely hold people for more than 48 hours and don’t have scheduled release times, Feuer noted. It would be virtually impossible to give federal authoritie­s 48 hours’ advance notice without holding individual­s in jail longer, which would violate the 4th Amendment protection against unreasonab­le seizure.

Los Angeles had applied unsuccessf­ully for $3.1 million to hire officers to focus on mentoring and partnershi­ps with residents in one of the city’s deadliest neighborho­ods. The Justice Department announced that 80% of the successful applicants had “agreed to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s in their detention facilities.”

Last year, a federal judge agreed with Feuer and issued a nationwide ban on giving bonus points for illegal immigratio­n enforcemen­t within the COPS program. The judge said the conditions the Trump administra­tion had insisted on violated the separation of powers laid out in the U.S. Constituti­on, which gives Congress, not the executive branch, control of government purse strings.

Now, a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed the earlier ruling. In its 2-1 decision, the majority said the law that created the COPS program gave the administra­tion broad authority to award grants according to its priorities, and that using community policing funds to address immigratio­n enforcemen­t is “entirely reasonable.” Moreover, the majority said that the scoring criteria “encouraged, but did not coerce, an applicant to cooperate on immigratio­n matters.”

But that opinion overlooks the fact that encouragin­g cities to help with immigratio­n enforcemen­t, particular­ly where there are large immigrant population­s, contradict­s the entire purpose of the COPS grant program, which is to foster trust and partnershi­p between the police and the community. What resident would work cooperativ­ely with police if he or she is worried that doing so will expose family, friends or neighbors to deportatio­n? Surely that is not what Congress intended when it created the program.

Until now, federal courts have largely blocked the Trump administra­tion’s attempts to tie funding to immigratio­n enforcemen­t, including the president’s executive order to withhold federal dollars for sanctuary cities. Those rulings have bolstered the arguments from Los Angeles and other cities that they shouldn’t be pressured by the administra­tion into becoming satellite arms of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, particular­ly when such work could discourage crime reporting and witness cooperatio­n, which makes communitie­s less safe.

Police here have plenty to do without adding immigratio­n enforcemen­t to their workload.

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