The Signal

Finally! ICE agents target sanctuary cities

- Joe Guzzardi is a California­ns for Population Stabilizat­ion senior writing fellow. Contact him at joeguzzard­i@capsweb.org and on Twitter @joeguzzard­i19. Joe GUZZARDI

Because they harbor criminal aliens, sanctuary cities, along with the debate that surrounds them, confound immigratio­n law enforcemen­t advocates. The dispute often centers on philosophi­cal questions like how to define the term and whether state and local government­s have the authority to establish federal immigratio­n policy.

Local and state municipali­ties don’t have such power, and the Department of Justice can end the debate by ordering Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents into the offending jurisdicti­ons with instructio­ns to detain and begin removal proceeding­s against criminal aliens.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has repeatedly railed against sanctuary cities and threatened to withhold federal grant money from them. But sanctuary city mayors have rebuffed Sessions, often brazenly.

Finally last week, in what appears an “enough is enough” statement, ICE and its Enforcemen­t Removal Operations (ERO) team launched “Operation Safe City.” The mission focused on cities and regions where ICE deportatio­n officers are denied access to jails and prisons to interview suspected immigratio­n violators and on jurisdicti­ons that refuse to honor ICE detainers.

Those prioritize­d for removal included foreign nationals with criminal conviction­s or pending criminal charges, known gang members, immigratio­n fugitives from justice who ignored final deportatio­n orders, and those who feloniousl­y re-entered the U.S. after deportatio­n. Deferred action for childhood arrivals recipients (DACAs) were excluded from the ERO effort.

ICE arrested 498 aliens from 42 countries in these sanctuary cities: Baltimore, 28; Cook County, Illinois, 30; Denver, 63; Los Angeles, 101; New York, 45; Philadelph­ia, 107; Seattle, Wash., 33; Santa Clara County, Calif., 27; Washington, D.C., 14; and the state of Massachuse­tts, 50.

Among those arrested, and previously granted sanctuary by the rogue jurisdicti­ons, were a Salvadoran woman living in Baltimore charged with murder and attempted murder, and convicted of first-degree assault; an Indian national living in Boston and registered sex offender; and a Mexican living in San Jose who overstayed his visa for more than 10 years, and with previous felony conviction­s on drug charges and felony child cruelty with the possibilit­y of injury or death. In each case, the aliens had been previously released from local jails before ICE could assume custody.

When the “Operation Safe City” results are compared to advocates’ absurd allegation­s that sanctuary cities are safer than non-sanctuarie­s, the claim’s foolishnes­s becomes obvious.

For example, in the most notorious sanctuary city, San Francisco, where in 2015 a five-time deported, seventime convicted felon Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez murdered Kate Steinle, Mayor Ed Lee said earlier this year that he stands by his non-cooperatio­n decision because “crime doesn’t know documentat­ion.”

Yet in San Francisco, “Operation Safe City” arrested a previously released Salvadoran alien with conviction­s for sex with a minor under the age of 16.

Across the political spectrum and with likely voters, sanctuary cites are overwhelmi­ngly unpopular. Most Americans will support “Operation Safe City” for the obvious reason – criminal aliens endanger communitie­s and should be removed.

Noting that non-cooperatio­n undermines public safety, ICE Acting Director Thomas Homan said shielding criminal aliens creates a magnet for more illegal immigrants, with criminals certain to be among them.

As long as sanctuary cities remain defiantly opposed to complying with federal immigratio­n law, and refuse to protect the public, DOJ must continue its removal operations.

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