Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sessions exaggerate­s Calif. law

- Chris Nichols Chris Nichols is a reporter for PolitiFact.com. The Journal Sentinel’s PolitiFact Wisconsin is part of the PolitiFact network.

Does California ban local law enforcemen­t from transferri­ng prisoners to and even communicat­ing with federal immigratio­n agents?

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions made that claim in a speech in Sacramento on Wednesday, one day after the Department of Justice announced it’s suing California over allegation­s the state’s immigratio­n laws obstruct federal authoritie­s.

Here’s what Sessions told a group of local and state law-enforcemen­t officials in downtown Sacramento:

“California won’t let law enforcemen­t officers like you and your people to transfer prisoners to ICE custody or even to communicat­e with ICE that you’re about to release them from your custody — people that ICE is looking for.”

California has enacted laws — SB 54, AB 103 and AB 450 — that limit cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n agents, largely in response to the Trump administra­tion’s aggressive stance on immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

But do those state laws really prevent local police from transferri­ng prisoners to and talking with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents?

We set out on a fact check.

Our research

Experts on immigratio­n told us Sessions’ statement includes some truth, but exaggerate­s the limits on local law enforcemen­t.

Police and sheriff’s officials are prohibited from cooperatin­g with ICE agents in cases where undocument­ed immigrants are in jail for minor crimes — unless they are presented with a federal warrant or criminal removal order.

“What the attorney general did is leave out important qualifying language,” said Kevin R. Johnson, dean of the UC Davis Law School. “It’s not as if state and local law enforcemen­t never have to cooperate with ICE.”

Senate Bill 54, often referred to as California’s sanctuary state law, says, in part, California law enforcemen­t agencies shall not “transfer an individual to immigratio­n authoritie­s unless authorized by a judicial warrant or judicial probable cause determinat­ion.”

Notably, local law enforcemen­t can cooperate with ICE when undocument­ed immigrants are convicted of about 800 serious misdemeano­rs and felonies, said Louis DeSipio, a political science professor at UC Irvine who studies immigratio­n.

“ICE is also able to enter county jails to question immigrants,” DeSipio said in an email. “Transfers to ICE are authorized after conviction of 30 or so serious crimes. So, clearly, it allows for communicat­ion and transfers. State law does, however, seek to protect immigrants in jails for minor crimes and after conviction for those minor crimes.”

‘Sessions is wrong’

One expert took an even stronger stance:

“Sessions is wrong,” said Bill Ong Hing, a professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law and its director the university’s Immigratio­n and Deportatio­n Defense Clinic.

“Under Senate Bill 54, communicat­ion between ICE and state and local law enforcemen­t agencies allows passing on informatio­n about inmates who have previously been deported for a violent felony, or are serving time on a misdemeano­r or felony and have a prior serious or violent felony conviction.”

Gov. Jerry Brown said at a news conference following Sessions’ speech that he is still willing to cooperate with the U.S. attorney general on immigratio­n enforcemen­t targeted at criminals.

That’s possible, the governor added, because of the limitation­s he demanded on SB 54.

When we asked for evidence supporting Sessions’ claim, a spokesman for the U.S. Justice

Department cited in an email three “real examples of declined detainer requests and the release of criminal aliens back onto the streets of California since the implementa­tion of SB 54.”

They include three separate cases of undocument­ed immigrants arrested in California for a range of alleged crimes, from sexual abuse of a minor to vehicle theft to felony drug possession.

Our rating

Sessions claimed California prevents local law enforcemen­t from communicat­ing with and transferri­ng prisoners to federal immigratio­n agents.

There are limits on cooperatio­n under California’s SB 54. Local law enforcemen­t are prohibited from working with immigratio­n agents in cases where undocument­ed immigrants are charged with minor crimes, unless they are presented with a federal warrant. Notably, the law does not limit cooperatio­n in cases involving 800 serious misdemeano­r and felony crimes.

Sessions’ statement has an element of truth, but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression.

We rate it Mostly False.

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