The Mercury News Weekend

Proposal brings police into focus

A two-decade-old program the feds want to expand has all but disappeare­d in California

- By Katy Murphy kmurphy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SACRAMENTO — A California proposal to shield people from deportatio­n by limiting communicat­ion between local police and federal agents took on new relevance this week after the Department of Homeland Security revealed it will try to enlist the help of local law enforcemen­t agencies to crack down further on illegal immigratio­n.

A two-decade-old program the feds want to expand — which delegates immigratio­n enforcemen­t authority to some

“We can’t cooperate with a law enforcemen­t agency we cannot trust.” — Kevin Vogel, Santa Cruz police chief

local officers — has all but disappeare­d from California. And state Senate Bill 54, if passed, could not only stamp the program out for good in the state but also further restrict cooperatio­n between cops and immigratio­n agencies, particular­ly at county jails.

“If the feds come to us and say we’d like to speak with person X, it would preclude that,” said Cory Salzillo, legislativ­e director for the California State Sheriffs’ Associatio­n, which opposes the measure because it believes such cooperatio­n promotes public safety.

The immigratio­n controvers­ies erupting in the early days of the Trump presidency provide a window into the delicate dance between federal immigratio­n authoritie­s and local law enforcemen­t officers in California, where “sanctuary” policies are common.

That relationsh­ip reached a breaking point this week in the sanctu- ary city of Santa Cruz. On Thursday, the city’s police chief, Kevin Vogel, held a news conference to announce that his department had been duped into participat­ing in a series of Feb. 13 immigratio­n raids by immigratio­n agents.

Vogel said Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, or ICE, falsely claimed the raids were part of a gangrelate­d investigat­ion. As a result, he said, police brass in Santa Cruz won’t be dealing with ICE anymore.

“We can’t cooperate with a law enforcemen­t agency we cannot trust,” Vogel told reporters.

ICE, however, vehemently denied that the agency had misled police and accused Santa Cruz police officials of playing politics. “The operation was the culminatio­n of a fiveyear investigat­ion which resulted in the arrest of 10 criminal organizati­on members on federal criminal charges in Santa Cruz, Daly City and Watsonvill­e,” said James Schwab, ICE spokesman for the San Francisco field office.

Several days before the operation, he said, ICE had notified Vogel that any “non-targeted” illegal immigrants during the raids “would be held briefly until determinat­ions could be made about their identities and case histories.” According to Schwab, 11 illegal immigrants were initially detained and all but one was released “due to his criminal history and possible ties to the ongoing investigat­ion.”

Experts say that even if they’re not in the business of enforcing immigratio­n policy — as local police chiefs and sheriffs almost invariably say — local officers may possess key informatio­n about the whereabout­s and release dates of defendants and convicted criminals — details that make it easier for federal agents to find and deport people.

Trump’s threat to withhold funds from sanctuary cities and this week’s memo about working more closely with local officers seem to point to the same issue: that “the federal government is at a significan­t informatio­n deficit,” said Pratheepan Gulasekara­m, who teaches immigratio­n law at Santa Clara University School of Law.

“The fact is, local law enforcemen­t is much more likely to encounter people (and) know where they are,” he said.

Gulasekara­m said the state has a strong argument in asserting it has the authority to restrict the use of state resources to cooperate with ICE, even as the feds try to make inroads with local agencies.

The program known as 287(g), which Congress passed in 1996 as part of the Illegal Immigratio­n Reform and Immigrant Responsibi­lity Act, is now in place at just a single agency in California: the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, according to the Department of Homeland Security’s roster.

In 2013, California passed the Trust Act, which prevents jails from keeping someone in custody for immigratio­n authoritie­s after they are eligible for release. The proposed new measures in SB 54, authored by Senate leader Kevin de León, would go further, preventing agencies from collecting informatio­n on people’s legal status or from responding to certain requests from federal agents for informatio­n such as phone numbers, work addresses or release dates.

Even before Homeland Security released draft memos on Tuesday indicating it would expand its pool of undocument­ed immigrants targeted for deportatio­n, California Democrats began introducin­g a raft of bills to complicate that effort, from providing state-funded defense attorneys to training public defenders on immigratio­n law to blocking entry of ICE into schools without authorizat­ion from the principal or superinten­dent.

“It’s putting up those defenses and circling around our immigrants and saying, ‘In order to get to our immigrants you’re going to have to go through us,’ ” said Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta, DOakland.

But the proposal to limit communicat­ion could face challenges — even with a Democratic supermajor­ity in both houses of the Legislatur­e — in its current form. One of its most vocal opponents is Sen. Joel Anderson, a Republican from El Cajon, northeast of San Diego.

“SB 54 is a huge departure from what we’ve done in the past,” Anderson said. The bill, he said, “makes no distinctio­n between Dreamers who are here to improve their lives and people who are here to prey on others.”

The California College & University Police Chiefs Associatio­n supports the measure, saying they think it will build trust and encourage victims to come forward. But two prominent police groups — the Sheriffs’ Associatio­n and the California Peace Officers Associatio­n — are opposed. The California Police Chiefs Associatio­n has yet to take a position.

Alameda County Sheriff Greg Ahern, who did not offer a personal position on the bill, put it this way: “I don’t work with the IRS on whether or not you paid your taxes. I don’t work with U.S. Customs to know if you have a passport or not. We don’t do front-line immigratio­n work whatsoever — never have since I have been sheriff and we have no plans to do so in the future.”

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