Chicago Sun-Times

COUNTERPOI­NT SANCTUARY CITIES LIKE CHICAGO HARBOR CRIMINALS

Congress has allowed sanctuary jurisdicti­ons like Cook County to nullify federal immigratio­n law for far too long. Sanctuary policies put our communitie­s in danger and must be stopped.

- BY MARK KRIKORIAN Mark Krikorian is executive director of the Washington- based Center for Immigratio­n Studies.

Dennis McCann was killed in 2011 by an alleged drunken driver in Chicago. The man charged, Saul Chavez, was an illegal alien with a prior felony who had never been reported to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

This time ICE was alerted and requested custody, but because of Cook County’s sanctuary policies to shield criminals from deportatio­n, Chavez escaped punishment by posting bail and running off.

Congress has allowed sanctuary jurisdicti­ons like Cook County to nullify federal immigratio­n law for far too long. Sanctuary policies put our communitie­s in danger and must be stopped.

Informatio­n obtained by the Center for Immigratio­n Studies from ICE shows that the number of sanctuary jurisdicti­ons has grown to 340, and each month they have been releasing about 1,000 criminal aliens whom ICE wanted to take into custody. Most of these people had significan­t prior criminal histories or other public safety concerns even before the arrest that led to the ICE request. A large number have been subsequent­ly re- arrested for new crimes— crimes they would not have been able to commit had they been deported.

This is not a problem that is going to fix itself. Nor is President Obama going to take steps to rein in these rogue jurisdicti­ons. In fact, the administra­tion’s new Priority Enforcemen­t Program, known by the faintly comical acronym PEP, explicitly allows jurisdicti­ons to obstruct immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

That’s why action by Congress is needed. Legislatio­n introduced by Sen. David Vitter, R- La., takes a balanced approach to curbing this dangerous practice. First, it would withhold certain federal funds from sanctuary jurisdicti­ons. There’s no reason cities, counties, or states that subvert federal law should be subsidized by the federal treasury.

The bill also would protect from predatory lawsuits the vast majority of sheriffs and police chiefs who understand that cooperatio­n with ICE is essential to public safety. The Obama administra­tion has actually made it easier for the ACLU and others to sue cooperativ­e sheriffs and police if ICE makes a mistake. Local law enforcemen­t must be accountabl­e for its own actions, but not for errors by the feds.

Without disincenti­ves, diehard sanctuary jurisdicti­ons like Cook County will not change their irresponsi­ble policies. Congress should act to preserve the integrity of federal immigratio­n law.

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