San Francisco Chronicle

New state sanctuary law draws a warning

Trump aide threatens to ‘conduct at-large arrests’

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — President Trump’s immigratio­n chief ripped into Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday for signing legislatio­n that creates a statewide sanctuary policy, saying the federal government will be forced to “conduct at-large arrests in local neighborho­ods and at work sites” of undocument­ed immigrants.

In a highly critical statement, Tom Homan, acting director of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, said California’s new law undermines public safety and makes it harder for federal immigratio­n officials to do their jobs.

He said Brown’s decision to sign SB54 on Thursday makes “California a sanctuary state

for illegal aliens — including those who have committed crimes.”

Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León, D-Los Angeles, who wrote SB54, immediatel­y fired back Friday, saying Homan’s comments were inaccurate and amounted to fearmonger­ing.

“The Trump administra­tion is once again making heavy-handed threats against California because we won’t help them tear apart families and our economy in the process,” de León said.

SB54 bars law enforcemen­t officers in the state from arresting individual­s based on civil immigratio­n warrants, asking about a person’s immigratio­n status, keeping an undocument­ed inmate in jail on an immigratio­n hold, or participat­ing in any joint task force with federal officials for the purpose of enforcing immigratio­n laws.

The bill does not prohibit federal immigratio­n officials or the Department of Homeland Security from enforcing federal immigratio­n laws in California. Instead, the law says California will not use its own law enforcemen­t resources to help the federal government in those actions. De León introduced the bill in direct response to Trump’s crackdown on undocument­ed immigrants, which has left many in fear.

“These are uncertain times for undocument­ed California­ns and their families, and this bill strikes a balance that will protect public safety, while bringing a measure of comfort to those families who are now living in fear every day,” Brown wrote after signing the bill Thursday.

Brown did not comment Friday on Homan’s remarks.

SB54 allows local jailers to notify immigratio­n officials when an undocument­ed immigrant in custody has been convicted of a violent felony, as well as hundreds of other crimes. The law largely exempts prisons in the state, allowing state correction­s officials to work with immigratio­n officials, although prison inmates have to provide written consent for federal immigratio­n agents to interview them while in custody.

State prison officials can still hold and transfer undocument­ed inmates at the request of federal immigratio­ns agents. The inmate is required to be notified of the action.

Despite de León, Brown and some law enforcemen­t officials in the state saying the bill does not interfere with ICE operations, Homan said it will.

“SB54 will negatively impact ICE operations in California by nearly eliminatin­g all cooperatio­n and communicat­ion with our law enforcemen­t partners in the state,” Homan said, adding the law also prohibits “local law enforcemen­t from contractin­g with the federal government to house detainees.”

By limiting their ability to work with jailers, Homan said they will have to focus immigratio­n enforcemen­t in communitie­s instead of jails and prisons, “which will inevitably result in additional collateral arrests.”

But ICE agents might have a tougher time raiding businesses in California too, under a second law the governor signed Thursday.

That legislatio­n, AB450, by Assemblyma­n David Chiu, D-San Francisco, bars private and public employers from allowing federal immigratio­n authoritie­s to look at records or conduct workplace sweeps unless they have judicial warrants to do so. The law, like SB54, takes effect Jan. 1.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said he stands “ready to fully defend” the sanctuary protection­s.

San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland and dozens of other jurisdicti­ons in California already have sanctuary city policies, with proponents of the protection­s saying it ensures undocument­ed immigrants can report crimes without fearing it will lead to their deportatio­n.

San Francisco’s sanctuary city policy bans city employees from helping or cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n agents in an investigat­ion or arrest related to a person’s immigratio­n status. It also bars employees from asking people who are applying for city benefits about their immigratio­n status or providing informatio­n about the release of an inmate, except in limited circumstan­ces.

Local sanctuary policies have not stopped federal immigratio­n officials from immigratio­n sweeps, including one last week that resulted in 27 people in the Bay Area being arrested, most with past criminal conviction­s. The sweep was part of an effort by the Trump administra­tion to target sanctuary cities. Last week’s raid in eight states and Washington, D.C., resulted in 498 people from 42 countries arrested, of which 181 had no previous criminal conviction, according to ICE.

Ed Medrano, president of the California Police Chiefs Associatio­n, said SB54 still allows for some partnershi­ps with federal immigratio­n agents, such as for criminal investigat­ions, easing concern his group had with the bill initially. The bill does bar those partnershi­ps when the focus is immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Medrano said the law “reaffirms what we have held since the beginning, which is that California law enforcemen­t should not be used to assist in mass deportatio­ns.”

 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Acting Immigratio­n Director Tom Homan plans to order arrests in neighborho­ods and at work sites.
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Acting Immigratio­n Director Tom Homan plans to order arrests in neighborho­ods and at work sites.

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