Los Angeles Times

Bay Area death upends the debate on immigratio­n

The killing, blamed on an often-deported felon, puts reformers on the defensive.

- By Seema Mehta

SAN FRANCISCO — The immigratio­n debate in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign unfolded along familiar lines: Republican­s called for greater border security and Democrats called for expanded rights for those in the country illegally.

All that changed one blue-sky day at Pier 14 on San Francisco’s world-famous Embarcader­o. A 32year-old woman was killed July 1 while strolling with her father near the Bay Bridge, allegedly by an immigrant with a lengthy rap sheet who was back in the country despite repeated deportatio­ns.

The death of Kathryn Steinle scrambled the political equation overnight, throwing immigratio­n reform advocates on the defensive, fueling the anger of hard-liners and causing even supporters of San Francisco’s liberal politics to pause and consider its status as a “sanctuary city” that generally refuses to turn over immigrants to federal law enforcemen­t officials.

Democrats, notably Hillary Rodham Clinton, sought to strike a delicate balance, continuing to embrace a liberal immigratio­n policy that is a top priority for their base while acknowledg­ing that something went terribly awry in San Francisco. Republican­s seized upon the tragedy as visceral proof of their contention that the Obama administra­tion’s failure to secure the border has left Americans unsafe.

The topic is fraught for the GOP, which needs to improve its standing with Latinos — a crucial and fastgrowin­g bloc of voters — who

have been alienated in the past by harsh rhetoric about immigrants living in this country illegally. At the same time, it also offers an opportunit­y to make inroads with moderate voters who may support the legalizati­on of some immigrants but cannot fathom how a man with the suspect’s record was ever freed to wander this city’s streets.

“It’s a powder keg,” said Republican consultant Rob Stutzman. “People who are very sympatheti­c to ‘Dreamers,’ to people being treated fairly, are confounded by why the hell we can’t keep criminals either in prison or the other side of the border.” (Dreamers refer to people brought to the country illegally as minors.)

There’s considerab­le finger-pointing over who bears responsibi­lity for the release of Juan Francisco Lopez Sanchez, the felon who has been charged with killing Steinle. But political discourse — in the nation’s capital, on talk radio and cable television, and on the campaign trail — has mostly focused on what responsibi­lity San Francisco’s status as a sanctuary city bears in the tragedy.

Several Republican candidates called for the federal government to punish the more than 200 jurisdicti­ons that have declared themselves sanctuarie­s, which were created in part so that immigrants could cooperate with law enforcemen­t without fear they would be deported.

Describing Steinle as a “precious young woman” who was failed by the system, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said that certain federal funds should be denied to jurisdicti­ons that refuse to cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“If it’s an act of defiance against the federal government, then they shouldn’t take federal law enforcemen­t money,” Bush told reporters Thursday after visiting an online firm in San Francisco.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee said that, if elected, he would reverse President Obama’s executive orders that allow some who are in the country illegally to remain here, while former Texas Gov. Rick Perry called for using either executive order or congressio­nal action to force sanctuary cities to provide immigratio­n officials access to their prisons and holding facilities.

Last week, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) introduced legislatio­n that would require state and local agencies to notify immigratio­n authoritie­s when they arrest and detain anyone in the country illegally. Federal prison officials would also be required to give precedence to transfer requests from Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t over state and local authoritie­s. Agencies that do not comply would forfeit some federal funding.

The House of Representa­tives voted Thursday, largely along party lines, to approve similar legislatio­n.

Donald Trump, the businessma­n who kicked off his presidenti­al bid last month with rhetoric labeling Mexican immigrants rapists and drug dealers, has seen his standing in the polls rise as he has hammered the issue. He has also been among the most vocal about Steinle’s killing.

“This man, or this animal, that shot that wonderful, that beautiful woman in San Francisco, this guy was pushed back by Mexico,” Trump told CNN this month. “Mexico pushes back people across the border that are criminals, that are drug dealers.”

Some Republican­s fear that Trump’s inflammato­ry words are hijacking what could have been a productive dialogue about immigratio­n policy.

“There could have been a very nice, thoughtful discussion,” said Hector Barajas, a GOP operative in Sacramento who recently acquired half a dozen piñatas that look like Trump. “Now what it has become is a sideshow.”

On the Democratic side, Clinton voiced support for the concept of sanctuary cities while blaming San Francisco officials for not cooperatin­g with the federal government.

“Here’s a case where we’ve deported, we’ve deported, we’ve deported,” she said on CNN. “He ends back up in our country, and I think the city made a mistake.”

The following day, her campaign released a statement reiteratin­g the candidate’s support for sanctuary cities and comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley appeared to criticize Clinton’s stance but did not mention her by name.

“Local government­s should not be blamed for the federal government’s inability to fix our broken immigratio­n system, nor should they be held responsibl­e for doing the federal government’s job,” he said.

Homeless at the time of his arrest, Lopez-Sanchez pleaded not guilty to murder in the shooting and is being held in lieu of $5-million bail. He is a seven-time felon who has been deported to his native Mexico five times.

When Lopez-Sanchez, 52, finished serving a federal prison sentence in March, he was turned over to San Francisco on a 20-year-old bench warrant for a $20 marijuana sale. Prosecutor­s declined to file charges.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t asked to be notified prior to his release, but city officials did not comply because LopezSanch­ez did not meet their criteria, set in 2013, for turning over people to immigratio­n officials. He was freed.

In a jailhouse interview with KGO-TV, Lopez-Sanchez admitted to accidental­ly shooting a gun he had found. He also said “he knew San Francisco was a sanctuary city where he would not be pursued by immigratio­n officials,” according to KGO.

In California, the matter could affect two of the state’s top Democrats — Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who both support sanctuary cities. Newsom was mayor of San Francisco and Harris the city’s district attorney in 2008 when an immigrant, who was in the country illegally and had felony juvenile conviction­s, killed three people. Harris is a candidate for the state’s open U.S. Senate seat next year, and Newsom is running for governor in 2018.

Several San Francisco residents interviewe­d near the site of the shooting said they were sympatheti­c to people living in the U.S. illegally, but they couldn’t understand how LopezSanch­ez was released.

“He came in the country five times illegally. Something obviously needs to be changed there,” said Jeffrey Yip, a 32-year-old Democrat. The software developer often walks to Pier 14 and sits gazing at the bay during work breaks. On a recent day, he sat near the flowerstre­wn memorial at the spot where Steinle was shot.

“I come here every day,” he said. “I expect it to be safe.”

seema.mehta@latimes.com

 ?? Michael Reynolds
European Pressphoto Agency ?? AT A SENATE PANEL hearing in Washington, a portrait of Kathryn Steinle, who was fatally shot on San Francisco’s Pier 14, is displayed. The immigrant charged in her killing had been deported to Mexico five times.
Michael Reynolds European Pressphoto Agency AT A SENATE PANEL hearing in Washington, a portrait of Kathryn Steinle, who was fatally shot on San Francisco’s Pier 14, is displayed. The immigrant charged in her killing had been deported to Mexico five times.

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