San Francisco Chronicle

Locales’ honesty in following sanctuary city laws questioned

- By Sadie Gurman Sadie Gurman is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department on Thursday questioned whether some so-called sanctuary cities responded honestly when asked whether they follow the law on sharing the citizenshi­p status of people in their custody with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

In a strongly worded statement, the department said some of the 10 jurisdicti­ons under scrutiny insist they are compliant with the law while still defiantly refusing to cooperate with efforts to detain and deport immigrants living in the country illegally. The Justice Department said it was reviewing policies of the jurisdicti­ons to determine whether they should lose some federal grant money for failing to prove they are adhering to federal immigratio­n law.

The cities include New York, Chicago, New Orleans and Philadelph­ia, which said in its letter to the department that the city was adhering to the law even while refusing to collect informatio­n on residents’ immigratio­n statuses.

Also on the list are two states — California and Connecticu­t — along with Miami-Dade County in Florida, Cook County in Illinois, Milwaukee County in Wisconsin and Clark County in Nevada.

The locales were singled out last year by the department’s inspector general for having rules that hinder the ability of local law enforcemen­t to communicat­e with federal officials about the immigratio­n status of people they have detained. The cities disagreed with that assessment.

“They are having it both ways now,” said Leon Fresco, who led the Justice Department’s Office of Immigratio­n Ligation during the Obama administra­tion. “The cities are saying, we will not in any way do anything that affirmativ­ely increases the amount of immigratio­n enforcemen­t that is occurring in our city. Having said that, if a federal official asks us for informatio­n, we will provide this informatio­n.”

The locales on Thursday stood by their policies:

Cook County, Ill., provided federal officials an eight-page legal opinion asserting its compliance, and adding, “The United States Constituti­on, however, limits the authority of the federal government to impose its immigratio­n obligation­s onto state and local government­s.”

Chicago also claimed it was following the law. “But make no mistake, Chicago will continue to be a welcoming city and stand up for the values that have made us a beacon of hope for immigrants and refugees from around the world for generation­s,” city spokeswoma­n Jennifer Martinez said.

Miami-Dade County sent a 423-page document to the Justice Department with informatio­n on the process its jailers follow to notify immigratio­n authoritie­s of people who were set to be released and had been previously wanted for possible deportatio­n.

Milwaukee County attorney Margaret Daun warned that if grant funding is pulled, “the County would avail itself of all legal options available to it and raise numerous legal arguments.”

New Orleans reminded the Justice Department that it adopted its immigratio­n status policy in accordance with a federal consent decree on police reforms that it negotiated with the Justice Department during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion. A court-appointed monitor reviewed and approved the policy language, the city noted.

And the sheriff in Clark County, Nevada, sent more than 100 pages of documents he said demonstrat­e police and jailers in Las Vegas cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

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