Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Judge rules for Philadelph­ia in ‘sanctuary city’ case

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PHILADELPH­IA – A federal judge has ruled for Philadelph­ia in its highly contentiou­s “sanctuary city” case against the Trump administra­tion, saying the city’s refusal to help enforce immigratio­n laws is based on policies that are reasonable, rational and equitable.

U.S. District Judge Michael Baylson issued his decision Wednesday afternoon, following a four-day trial this spring and nearly a year of litigation, ruling that the Trump administra­tion’s attempt to withhold about $1.5 million in federal law enforcemen­t grant money “violates statutory and constituti­onal law.”

The money comes under what is called an Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant. “The city is entitled to prompt payment of the JAG funds,” the judge said.

Mayor Jim Kenney’s office had no immediate comment, as its attorneys were still reviewing the Mayor Jim Kenney speaks at a 2016 press conference in Philadelph­ia, Pa.

ruling Wednesday afternoon.

The city challenged three specific conditions of the grant:

First, that it must provide U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, known as ICE, with access to city prisons to conduct interviews with prisoners. Second, that when ICE asks, the city must provide advance notice of when undocument­ed people are being released from prison. And third, that the city must comply with a law that, according to the federal

government, requires local officials to share informatio­n about the citizenshi­p or immigratio­n status of any person.

The judge shot those down.

“The public statements of President Trump and Attorney General (Jeff) Sessions, asserting that immigrants commit more crimes than native-born citizens, are inaccurate as applied to Philadelph­ia, and do not justify the imposition of these three conditions,” he wrote.

In his ruling, Baylson said given that 11 million undocument­ed people live in the US, “most of them living peacefully with families, children and good jobs,” the complexity of the Philadelph­ia case demonstrat­es “the sheer impossibil­ity, as well as great expense, of relying on a policy of ‘removal’.”

The Trump administra­tion wanted to hold onto the grant funds unless the city agreed to actively assist federal authoritie­s in identifyin­g and turning over undocument­ed immigrants. The city sued in the summer of 2017, saying the Police Department is not an arm of immigratio­n enforcemen­t, and that making it one would damage community relations.

A key issue was the city’s refusal to honor ICE detainers for people who were being released from custody, viewing those papers as administra­tive requests, not binding. City officials say they will respond to a detainer only if that paperwork is accompanie­d by a signed warrant from a judge.

 ?? The Philadelph­ia Inquirer (TNS) ??
The Philadelph­ia Inquirer (TNS)

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