Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Officer’s death reignites sanctuary law debate

Sheriff says Calif. rule let suspect stay in U.S.

- By Olga R. Rodriguez and Jocelyn Gecker

SAN FRANCISCO — The shooting death of a California police officer has reignited the debate over sanctuary laws, with a sheriff all but blaming the statewide immigratio­n policy for the killing as he announced the arrest of a man living in the U.S. illegally.

A two-day statewide manhunt ended Friday with the arrest of Gustavo Perez Arriaga, who came out with his hands up as a SWAT team prepared to raid a home in Bakersfiel­d, about 200 miles southeast of where Cpl. Ronil Singh was shot in the small town of Newman before dawn Wednesday.

Perez Arriaga was captured while planning to flee to his native Mexico, authoritie­s said.

Sheriff Adam Christians­on, who led the investigat­ion, blamed California’s sanctuary law for preventing local authoritie­s from reporting Perez Arriaga to U.S. immigratio­n officials for deportatio­n after two previous drunken driving arrests.

“We can’t ignore the fact that this could have been preventabl­e,” Christians­on told reporters, asking why the state was “providing sanctuary for criminals (and) gang members. It’s a conversati­on we need to have.”

The laws are a flashpoint between jurisdicti­ons that say they allow immigrant communitie­s to report crimes without fear of deportatio­n and the Trump administra­tion, which has vowed to crack down on such cities and states.

Perez Arriaga crossed the border in Arizona several years ago and had worked a variety of jobs as a laborer, including at several dairies.

The 33-year-old had gang affiliatio­ns and Facebook pages with different names, Christians­on said.

An email to a sheriff ’s spokesman asking whether Perez Arriaga had a lawyer who could speak on his behalf wasn’t returned, and a phone call rang to a voicemail that was full.

California’s sanctuary law includes more than 800 exceptions for violent crimes and felonies and bars police from asking people about their citizenshi­p status.

Gov. Jerry Brown has said the law strikes a balance between protecting families and ensuring consequenc­es for serious criminals. His spokesman said Friday that if the suspect were a known gang member, police could have informed federal authoritie­s.

“California law fully permits the sharing of informatio­n on dangerous gang members,” spokesman Evan Westrup said.

Former state Sen. Kevin de Leon, the Democrat who wrote the legislatio­n, said it’s “highly irresponsi­ble” to blame the law for the officer’s death.

“The type of tone and attitude that Sheriff Christians­on has taken instills fear and panic in all immigrant communitie­s” that could make people afraid to report crimes, de Leon told KNX-AM radio in Los Angeles.

Cpl. Singh had pulled over a suspected drunken driver in Newman when he was fatally wounded, and he managed to fire back but didn’t hit the attacker, authoritie­s have said.

 ?? Joan Barnett Lee The Associated Press ?? Reggie Singh, center, brother of slain Newman police officer Ronil Singh, thanks law enforcemen­t officials during a news conference Friday in Modesto, Calif., following the arrest of suspect Gustavo Perez Arriaga.
Joan Barnett Lee The Associated Press Reggie Singh, center, brother of slain Newman police officer Ronil Singh, thanks law enforcemen­t officials during a news conference Friday in Modesto, Calif., following the arrest of suspect Gustavo Perez Arriaga.

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