San Francisco Chronicle

By Jeff Sessions

- Jeff Sessions is the U.S. attorney general.

Kathryn Steinle might be alive today if she had not lived in a “sanctuary city.” Just 32 years old, Steinle was shot and killed nearly two years ago while strolling along San Francisco’s Pier 14. The alleged shooter was an illegal immigrant with seven felony conviction­s who had been deported five times. Only weeks earlier, the city had released him from custody, even though federal immigratio­n authoritie­s had filed a detainer requesting he be kept in custody until they could remove him for deportatio­n proceeding­s. Even worse, this man admitted he came to San Francisco in part because of its sanctuary policies. Steinle’s tragic death made the abstract debate over sanctuary cities something real for the American people. They were justifiabl­y angry to learn that many cities and states obstruct enforcemen­t of our immigratio­n laws, and that this lawlessnes­s is costing lives. As the attorney general of the United States, I have a duty to protect public safety and uphold our nation’s rule of law. “Sanctuary city” policies harm both. These policies take different forms. Some jurisdicti­ons have explicit laws in place. In others, political leaders have declared they will not turn over criminal aliens in their jails to federal agents for lawful deportatio­n or even notify federal agents that they have made an arrest — preferring instead to release aliens who have committed crimes such as domestic violence, child abuse and rape back into their communitie­s. Others are less blatant, simply refusing to honor Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detainer requests. No matter what form these policies take, they all have the same effect: They harm public safety, by putting numerous criminal aliens back on our streets. They also undermine the rule of law, by signaling that our nation’s immigratio­n laws — laws passed by our representa­tives to serve our national interest — can be willfully ignored. Supporters say “sanctuary” policies help fight crime by encouragin­g illegal immigrants to report crimes without fear of deportatio­n. But how can we fight crime by allowing criminal aliens whom the law requires to be deported to stay in our country? And how does it promote the rule of law when our citizens see their leaders disregard the law? I want San Francisco and other cities to re-evaluate these policies and recognize that we must have a lawful immigratio­n system that keeps us safe, upholds the rule of law, and serves our national interest. The American people want, and deserve, nothing less.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ??
Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press

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