Chicago Sun-Times

CITY SUING U. S. OVER FUNDING ‘ BLACKMAIL’

Mayor attacks White House cash threat against sanctuary cities

- BY NADER ISSA Staff Reporter Contributi­ng: Lynn Sweet Email: nissa@ suntimes. com Twitter:@ Nader Dissa

Mayor Rahm Emanuel accused the Trump administra­tion on Sunday of trying to blackmail Chicago and other sanctuary cities by threatenin­g to withhold crime- fighting money if police department­s don’t cooperate with federal immigratio­n agents.

Emanuel, flanked by Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson and U. S. Rep. Danny Davis, announced that Chicago will sue the Trump administra­tion, claiming new requiremen­ts to receive federal money are unconstitu­tional.

The Justice Department fired back at Emanuel, pointing out the city’s growing problem with violent crimes.

“In 2016, more Chicagoans were murdered than in New York City and Los Angeles combined. So it’s especially tragic that the mayor is less concerned with that staggering figure than he is spending time and taxpayer money protecting criminal aliens and putting Chicago’s law enforcemen­t at greater risk,” Justice Department spokeswoma­n Sarah Isgur Flores told the Sun- Times.

However, the two lawfirms handling the case for the city, Riley Safer and Wilmer Hale, are not charging for their services, the city said.

At issue is the Trump administra­tion’s stepped- up actions to force local government­s shielding undocument­ed immigrants — such as Chicago and Cook County — to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s who want access to local jails, informatio­n about undocument­ed immigrants and other accommodat­ions.

The lawsuit will argue that President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions are acting unconstitu­tionally in threatenin­g the city’s Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant program funds, meant to support local policing efforts. The suit will be filed Monday in federal court in Chicago.

Chicago has used the federal grants to buy SWAT equipment, police vehicles, radios and Tasers. Last year, the program gave Chicago $ 2.3 million.

Other cities and states on the Justice Department’s radar include California, New York City, New Orleans, Philadelph­ia, Las Vegas, Miami and Milwaukee. Emanuel said Chicago is the first city to file such a lawsuit, but he expects other cities to challenge the new requiremen­ts.

Federal officials published the applicatio­n for Byrne grants on Thursday, with a deadline of Sept. 3. The applicatio­n included the new conditions, which Emanuel said Trump and Sessions are using to “coerce” the city into choosing between its values and effective policing. He said immigratio­n and policing strategy are unrelated.

“Chicago will not be blackmaile­d into changing our values, and we are and will remain a welcoming city,” Emanuel said.

“The federal government should be working with cities to provide necessary resources to improve public safety, not concocting new schemes to reduce our crime- fighting resources,” he added. The Sun- Times has reported that in Chicago, there has been no known connection between undocument­ed immigrants and the spike in the city’s violent crime.

Johnson said he doesn’t want people in Chicago to avoid reporting crimes or making contact with police out of fear of their immigratio­n status.

Under the new guidelines, the Justice Department also wants local jurisdicti­ons to tell federal officials of an undocument­ed immigrant’s release from police custody at least 48 hours in advance. Legal experts say that request could cause police department­s to hold people for longer than 48 hours, violating their constituti­onal rights.

Mary McCarthy, executive director of the National Immigrant Justice Center, called the Justice Department’s battle a “selfish choice.”

“History in the past six months has proven that the courts are really an important vehicle to ensure that the laws and policies in this country are constituti­onal and legal,” McCarthy said. “We can’t afford to lose that money.”

“It also is an issue of creating greater fear in the community,” she added.

Last week, Sessions said sanctuary cities make the country less safe.

“These policies are driven by politics and do not protect their citizens,” he said. “We will fight them with every lawful tool available.”

Chicago Corporatio­n Counsel Ed Siskel, a former high- ranking Justice Department lawyer, said he doesn’t believe Sessions has the authority to add the requiremen­ts to a grant program created by Congress or to force local police department­s to carry out federal immigratio­n functions.

 ?? | NADER ISSA/ SUN- TIMES ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel, with Police Supt. Eddie Johnson ( left) and U. S. Rep. Danny Davis ( front right), announces a federal lawsuit challengin­g the Justice Department’s threats to withhold federal funding from sanctuary cities and states.
| NADER ISSA/ SUN- TIMES Mayor Rahm Emanuel, with Police Supt. Eddie Johnson ( left) and U. S. Rep. Danny Davis ( front right), announces a federal lawsuit challengin­g the Justice Department’s threats to withhold federal funding from sanctuary cities and states.
 ??  ?? Jeff Sessions
Jeff Sessions

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