Kuwait Times

US attorney general escalates pressure on ‘sanctuary’ cities

Sessions threatens to cut off grants

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Attorney General Jeff Sessions has threatened to cut off US Justice Department grants to cities that fail to assist federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, moving the Trump administra­tion closer to a potential clash with leaders of America’s largest urban centers. Sessions’ statements were aimed at a dozens of cities and other local government­s, including New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, that have joined a growing “sanctuary” movement aimed at shielding illegal immigrants from stepped-up deportatio­n efforts.

Police agencies in those jurisdicti­ons have barred their officers from routinely checking on immigratio­n status when making arrests or traffic stops. And they have refused to lock up individual­s longer than otherwise warranted at the request of federal agents seeking to deport them. Trump administra­tion officials says the deportatio­n crackdown is focused on illegal immigrants convicted of serious crimes. They insist public safety is jeopardize­d when police refuse to notify US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t of plans to release such a person from local custody.

“Failure to deport aliens who are convicted of criminal offenses puts whole communitie­s at risk, especially immigrant communitie­s in the very sanctuary jurisdicti­ons that seek to protect the perpetrato­rs,” Sessions said at a White House news briefing. His threat to withhold grants as punishment drew swift condemnati­on from California and New York officials. California Senate leader Kevin de Leon, a Los Angeles Democrat, called Sessions’ threat “nothing short of blackmail,” accusing of “race-based scapegoati­ng” in its crackdown on immigrants.

Critics also argue that enlisting police cooperatio­n in rounding up immigrants for removal undermines communitie­s’ trust in local police, particular­ly among Latinos. And they question whether the administra­tion is really targeting dangerous criminals. President Donald Trump, who made tougher immigratio­n enforcemen­t a cornerston­e of his campaign, directed the government to cut off funding to sanctuary jurisdicti­ons in a Jan 25 executive order. That order has yet to be put into effect, but Sessions’ announceme­nt seemed to be the first step in doing so. The Justice Department grants typically are used to help police improve crime-fighting techniques, buy new equipment and assist victims of crime. Sessions may find his ability to sway local decision-making through the Justice Department’s purse is limited, because only a fraction of its grant dollars flow directly to city and county government­s. Federal records show the Justice Department doled out $1 billion to state government­s and $430 million to nonprofits, but only $136 million directly to cities and counties last year. New York state Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an said his office would continue helping local government­s “have the tools they need to protect their immigrant communitie­s.”

Local defiance

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, whose city is home to one of the largest US immigrant communitie­s, also denounced Sessions’ threat to use funding as a form of coercion. “LA’s values are not for sale,” Garcetti said. “Slashing funds for first responders, for our port and airport, for counterter­rorism, crimefight­ing and community-building serves no one.” So far no state has adopted policies barring cooperatio­n with immigratio­n authoritie­s, though Maryland’s Democratic-controlled House of Delegates approved such legislatio­n last week. The state’s Republican governor, Larry Hogan, has said he would veto the bill. California’s De Leon is backing a bill that would essentiall­y make all of the most populous US state a sanctuary, but he does not currently have the votes to pass it.

Sessions sought to frame the debate as a publicsafe­ty issue, citing the case of a woman shot to death in San Francisco two years ago by illegal immigrant who had already been deported five times and had seven felony conviction­s. San Francisco may not be affected by the new restrictio­ns, as the city and county received no funding from the department in the most recent fiscal year. However, Sessions’ order could impact other jurisdicti­ons. New Orleans, Philadelph­ia, Chicago and New York City - all singled out as possibly noncomplia­nt by an inspector general’s report last year - collective­ly received $15 million in Justice Department grants. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions
Attorney General Jeff Sessions

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