Los Angeles Times

Deportee faces murder trial

Juan Francisco Lopez- Sanchez is accused of shooting Kathryn Steinle in San Francisco.

- By Christine Mai- Duc christine.maiduc@latimes.com Times staff writer Lee Romney contribute­d to this report.

The man accused of fatally shooting 32- year- old Kathryn Steinle while she strolled along San Francisco’s Embarcader­o will stand trial for murder, a San Francisco judge ruled Friday.

Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, who prosecutor­s believe is 52 but is reported to use several aliases and ages, will face charges of seconddegr­ee murder and being a felon in possession of a weapon, said Max Szabo, a spokesman for the San Francisco district attorney’s office.

San Francisco Superior Court Judge Brendan Conroy made the ruling during a preliminar­y hearing Friday, Szabo confirmed.

Steinle, who had recently moved to San Francisco from the suburb of Pleasanton, was shot in the back July 1as she walked with her father on Pier 14, near the Embarcader­o and Mission Street. Steinle’s last words to her father were, “Help me, Dad,” Jim Steinle said, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee weeks later.

Lopez- Sanchez was arrested less than an hour later, about a mile from the shooting scene. He said inan interview with KGO-TV that he had accidental­ly fired a gun that he found wrapped in a T- shirt near a bench. He later said that he had taken strong sleeping pills before the incident and that his recollecti­ons were murky.

It was subsequent­ly discovered that the gun had been stolen from a U. S. Bureau of Land Management vehicle.

Lopez- Sanchez, who had returned to the United States after being deported to Mexico five times, has become a flashpoint in the debate over immigratio­n law and so- called sanctuary cities.

In March, Lopez- Sanchez completed his third federal prison term for felony reentry into the United States from Mexico. He was transferre­d to local custody because of a decades- old bench warrant over suspected marijuana possession but was released after prosecutor­s decided not to pursue the case. Immigratio­n officials say their request to be notified before Lopez- Sanchez’s release was not honored.

San Francisco, a socalled sanctuary city, honors immigratio­n holds only if the person has a violent record or if a judge has vetted the hold or approved a warrant. The city’s sheriff and mayor have defended the policies as a way to protect immigrants without violent criminal records and encourage them to report crimes to police.

The San Francisco Sheriff ’ s Department said that federal immigratio­n officials did not seek a court order in the case of Lopez- Sanchez.

The case has sparked calls for immigratio­n reform and prompted California lawmakers to propose laws that would make it harder for local authoritie­s to intervene in cases involving accused criminals scheduled for deportatio­n.

Three- fourths of California­ns surveyed oppose sanctuary-city policies, according to a poll released Friday by UC Berkeley’s Institute of Government­al Studies. Large majorities across all ethnic groups and political affiliatio­ns believe that local authoritie­s should not be allowed to ignore federal immigratio­n holds, according to the survey.

When survey participan­ts were told about the details of Steinle’s death and the case involving Lopez- Sanchez, opposition to sanctuary city policies rose to 76% from71%

( There are limitation­s to the data, researcher­s say. Nearly all the people surveyed were U. S. citizens, and the survey was conducted only in English.)

Earlier this week, Steinle’s family filed claims against San Francisco city and county, aswell as federal immigratio­n officials and the Bureau of Land Management, alleging that all of the agencies bear responsibi­lity for her death.

On Thursday, Conroy ruled that statements that Lopez-Sanchez made to police after his arrest would be admitted in court.

Lopez- Sanchez’s next court hearing is scheduled for Sept. 18. If convicted, he faces 45 years to life in prison.

 ?? Michael Macor
Associated Press ?? JUAN FRANCISCO Lopez- Sanchez, right, faces charges including second- degreemurd­er. Above, he is led into a courtroom in July.
Michael Macor Associated Press JUAN FRANCISCO Lopez- Sanchez, right, faces charges including second- degreemurd­er. Above, he is led into a courtroom in July.

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