The Columbus Dispatch

Gov. Brown blasts Sessions over ‘sanctuary’ lawsuit

- By Alexei Koseff

FEDERAL IMMIGRATIO­N LAW /

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Gov. Jerry Brown on Wednesday slammed U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions for “initiating a reign of terror” against immigrants in California.

Sessions on Tuesday filed suit against the state over three new laws, passed last year to protect immigrants living in California illegally, that he argues violate the supremacy clause of the U.S. Constituti­on and interfere with federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“This is basically going to war against the state of California, the engine of the American economy,” Brown said. “It’s not wise, it’s not right and it will not stand.”

Brown and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra held a press conference at the Capitol to defend the laws, which followed a speech by Sessions to a law enforcemen­t conference in downtown Sacramento on Wednesday morning. In the speech, which Brown dismissed as a “political stunt,” Sessions accused California officials of creating an open borders system and trying to secede from the United States.

“It’s about dividing America,” Brown said, adding that Sessions was acting more like Fox News than the country’s top law enforcemen­t official. “I call upon him to apologize to the people of California for bringing the mendacity of Washington to California and trying to insert discord and division, and I might add dysfunctio­nality, in a state that’s really working.”

Senate Bill 54, Assembly Bill 103 and Assembly Bill 450 — the three laws that Sessions sued over — restrict California law enforcemen­t officials from cooperatin­g on federal immigratio­n actions, limit the ability of local jails to contract with the federal government to house immigrant detainees, and require employers to ask for a warrant before allowing immigratio­n authoritie­s to conduct a workplace raid.

Commonly known as the “sanctuary state” law, SB 54 has been by far the most controvers­ial. In its lawsuit, the federal government argued that it forces the release of immigrants who have already shown a willingnes­s to engage in criminal activity.

Becerra defended the law under the 10th Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on, which he said gives California the right to decline to participat­e in civil immigratio­n enforcemen­t. He said the President Donald Trump’s threats to pull grants from local police agencies over SB 54 amounted to “coercion.”

“Here in California, we respect the law and the Constituti­on. We expect the federal government to do the same,” Becerra said at the press conference. “California is in the business of public safety. We’re not in the business of deportatio­ns.”

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