Los Angeles Times

Santa Cruz cries foul over gang raid

- By Richard Winton and James Queally

A Northern California raid ostensibly targeting violent gang members triggered a dispute Thursday, with Santa Cruz’s police chief angrily accusing the Homeland Security Department of turning it into a secret immigratio­n sweep.

Chief Kevin Vogel accused Homeland Security officials of lying about the scope of the raids conducted jointly between his department and federal agents this month aimed at apprehendi­ng MS-13 gang members.

“The Department of Homeland Security, unbeknowns­t to us at the Santa Cruz Police Department, had acted outside the scope of this operation and had detained and removed a number of individual­s from locations based upon their immigratio­n status,” Vogel said at a news conference.

“The community has an absolute right to be angry over this. This has violated the trust of the community, and we cannot tell you how disappoint­ed we are by the

betrayal of the Department of Homeland Security.”

Federal officials denied that they acted to deceive local authoritie­s, and said police knew others besides the gang members would be held briefly to ascertain their identities and histories. The department said it detained 10 gang members and 11 others for immigratio­n violations. All but one of those detained for the immigratio­n violations were released, federal officials said.

The controvers­y comes as tensions over immigratio­n policy under the Trump administra­tion have increased, with many civil rights advocates asserting that federal agents are more emboldened in their actions.

In a statement, U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t spokesman James Schwab said that a multi-agency operation conducted on Feb. 13 served warrants at 11 locations in Santa Cruz, Daly City and Watsonvill­e as part of an operation to arrest members of the MS-13 criminal organizati­on.

In addition, Schwab said, 11 people in the U.S. illegally were detained for immigratio­n violations because of their associatio­n with the suspected gang members. Schwab said the one person still being held had a “criminal history and possible ties to the ongoing criminal investigat­ion.”

“We worked closely with the Santa Cruz Police Department over the last five years on this case,” Schwab said. “Allegation­s that the agency secretly planned an immigratio­n enforcemen­t action in hopes there would be new political leadership that would allow for an alleged ‘secret’ operation to take place are completely false, reckless and disturbing.”

Schwab said the special agent in charge of the operation notified the police chief that “any non-targeted foreign nationals” at the raid locations would be held briefly to determine their identities and histories, and it was agreed none would be brought to the police facility or placed in police cars.

Ryan L. Spradlin, the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t special agent in charge in San Francisco, added in a statement: “It’s unfortunat­e when politics get intertwine­d with a well planned and executed public safety operation. When politics undermine law and order, the only winners are the criminals.”

The 10 suspected MS-13 gang members detained were responsibl­e for at least four murders, authoritie­s said.

At his news conference, Vogel said he had been repeatedly assured the raids would target only violent gang members under indictment after a five-year investigat­ion.

Santa Cruz designated itself a sanctuary city more than three decades ago, initially as a refuge for undocument­ed people fleeing violence in Central America. Under the designatio­n, city officials don’t use immigratio­n status for law enforcemen­t actions.

Vogel said the department first learned of a possible immigratio­n sweep on Feb. 14 from residents at a City Council meeting. He said immigratio­n officials eventually admitted that some detentions were made based on immigratio­n status.

Santa Cruz Mayor Cynthia Chase said the action by federal authoritie­s was disturbing and a violation of the city’s sanctuary status.

“We understand and recognize the anger and fear that are circulatin­g throughout the community,” Chase said.

Jennie Pasquarell­a, a senior staff attorney and director of the immigrants’ rights project at the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, said the complaints levied by Santa Cruz police were emblematic of the increasing­ly aggressive stance taken by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t since President Trump’s most recent executive orders.

“ICE is completely unhinged from any of the prior policies that governed their enforcemen­t actions,” Pasquarell­a said.

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