The Arizona Republic

Judge bashes Miami-Dade decision to help ICE agents

- Alan Gomez

@alangomez USA TODAY MIAMI A judge on Friday rebuked Miami-Dade County’s decision to fully comply with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s following threats by President Trump to withhold funds for “sanctuary cities” that provide havens for undocument­ed immigrants.

Florida Circuit Court Judge Milton Hirsch ruled that the county should not have jailed a Haitian national who was being detained solely for Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) agents. In a strongly worded, 15page order, Hirsch said the county violated the 10th Amendment of the Constituti­on by detaining the man based only on ICE’s interest in investigat­ing his immigratio­n status.

Hirsch wrote that local jail officials were acting as “appendages of ICE” and that the county was serving as a “handmaiden to the federal government” despite the limitation­s establishe­d in the 10th Amendment, which restricts the power of the federal government over states.

“No doubt the limitation­s imposed by the 10th Amendment, like so many limitation­s imposed by the Constituti­on, are a source of frustratio­n to those who dream of wielding power in unpreceden­ted ways or to unpreceden­ted degrees,” Hirsch wrote. “But America was not made for those who dream of power. America was made for those with the power to dream.”

The ruling only applied to the one detainee and does not stop the county from cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s on other cases.

Miami-Dade County spokesman Michael Hernandez said the county was planning an immediate appeal but said the lawsuit should not be handled in circuit courts. He called the legal challenge “a federal issue which should be handled in federal court.”

Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez threw the county into the federal immigratio­n debate when he became the first in the nation to give in to Trump’s threats against “sanctuary cities.”

Trump signed an executive order Jan. 25 to withhold federal grants from jurisdicti­ons that don’t comply with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s. That is a broad term that describes more than 300 city, county and state government­s with policies that limit how much local authoritie­s will cooperate with ICE.

The next day, Gimenez issued a directive to the head of his jail to begin honoring all “detainers” issued by ICE — the legal request ICE makes to a local jail to detain somebody for up to 48 hours to give federal agents time to investigat­e the person’s immigratio­n status or pick them up.

Gimenez said the move was necessary to ensure the county doesn’t lose out on $355 million it receives in federal funding. The county commission agreed, voting 9-3 on Feb. 17 to adopt Gimenez’s decision.

The decision triggered protests throughout the county, where the majority of residents are foreignbor­n. People protested outside city hall for weeks, and the commission heard hours of testimony from immigrants, attorneys and religious leaders who questioned the legality and morality of it.

Friday’s order addressed the case of James Lacroix, a Haitian who has been legally residing in Miami after he was granted “temporary protected status” following the island nation’s devastatin­g earthquake in 2010. He was arrested by local police and charged with two felony counts of driving with a suspended license but was set to be released Tuesday, when the jail received a “detainer” request from ICE. Lacroix was then held for 28 hours before he was picked up by ICE.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES ?? Cecelia O’Brian, left, Trisha Tatum and others protest MiamiDade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez’s decision.
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES Cecelia O’Brian, left, Trisha Tatum and others protest MiamiDade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez’s decision.

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