San Francisco Chronicle

State backs S.F. in sanctuary lawsuit opposing Trump

- By Dominic Fracassa

California joined San Francisco on Monday in taking legal action challengin­g a Trump administra­tion threat to withhold federal public safety grants from sanctuary cities that refuse to cooperate in deportatio­ns.

A lawsuit filed by Attorney General Xavier Becerra makes California the first state in the country to take on the U.S. Justice Department’s plan to pull the grant money. San Francisco filed

its own lawsuit Friday, the second such legal action it has filed against the Trump administra­tion.

Becerra said the state’s lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, was based on the same grounds as the city’s — that President Trump and his administra­tion can’t withhold money from a congressio­nally approved program without Congress’ agreement

“We abide by federal law. We respect the Constituti­on. The federal government should do the same,” Becerra said at a news conference with San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera at City Hall.

Becerra’s lawsuit, if successful, could help lay the foundation for state legal efforts against the administra­tion should the Legislatur­e approve a sanctuary-state bill that would prohibit local police officers and sheriff ’s deputies from enforcing federal immigratio­n laws. Gov. Jerry Brown has said he has concerns about the measure, which some law enforcemen­t officials strongly oppose.

The Trump administra­tion has repeatedly sought to compel sanctuary cities to cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s by threatenin­g to withdraw their federal funding. In April, San Francisco and Santa Clara County persuaded a federal judge to block a key section of an executive order issued by Trump that would withhold federal funding for sanctuary cities, calling the measure unconstitu­tional and an overreach by the federal government. The administra­tion is appealing that decision.

The new lawsuits concern the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program, which provides money that local government­s use to buy equipment such as police cars and fund a variety of public safety efforts, including jail diversion initiative­s, adult alternativ­e courts and social work services.

Each year, San Francisco receives about $1.5 million from the grant program. About a third of that comes from the federal government, and the rest from the state.

Last month, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the Justice Department would withhold Byrne grants to sanctuary cities unless their officials agreed to work more closely with immigratio­n officers. Specifical­ly, San Francisco and other sanctuary cities would have to grant jail access to federal immigratio­n officials to interrogat­e suspects. They would also have to provide federal officials with 48 hours’ notice of the impending release of people wanted for immigratio­n-related questionin­g.

In response to the latest lawsuits, a Justice Department spokesman said via email that San Francisco and other California cities “have already experience­d the devastatin­g effects that sanctuary policies have on their citizens.” He said it was “especially disappoint­ing that

“We abide by federal law. We respect the Constituti­on. The federal government should do the same.” Xavier Becerra California attorney general

state leaders would take steps to limit cooperatio­n between local jurisdicti­ons and immigratio­n authoritie­s that are trying to keep California­ns safe.”

Trump made a campaign issue out of the 2015 killing of Kathryn Steinle, allegedly by a Mexican citizen who had been deported several times before being shipped from a federal prison to San Francisco to face possible prosecutio­n for a marijuana charge. Prosecutor­s dropped the charge, and the Sheriff ’s Department let him go without turning him over to immigratio­n officials.

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee said it was the Trump administra­tion that was endangerin­g public safety “in the name of politics” by threatenin­g to withhold the grant money. “San Francisco will not be intimidate­d by the federal government’s threats,” he said in a statement.

At Monday’s news conference, Herrera called the administra­tion’s efforts to pressure sanctuary cities into complying with immigratio­n officers “an end-run around the Constituti­on” that vilifies immigrants and punishes cities that prioritize public safety services “over splitting up hardworkin­g families.”

“The Department of Justice does not have authority from Congress to impose these conditions (on the grants), and for good reason.” Herrera said.

Dominic Fracassa is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: DFracassa@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @dominicfra­cassa

 ?? Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle ?? New UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ steps in as the first woman to lead the venerable, clamorous campus.
Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle New UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ steps in as the first woman to lead the venerable, clamorous campus.
 ?? Paul Kuroda / Special to The Chronicle ?? S.F. City Attorney Dennis Herrera (center) joins California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (right), announcing lawsuits against President Trump’s threat to deny funds to sanctuary cities.
Paul Kuroda / Special to The Chronicle S.F. City Attorney Dennis Herrera (center) joins California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (right), announcing lawsuits against President Trump’s threat to deny funds to sanctuary cities.

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