Los Angeles Times

Essential Politics:

‘Sanctuary state’ legislatio­n splits law enforcemen­t.

- By Jazmine Ulloa jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com Twitter: @jazmineull­oa

SACRAMENTO — Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones says he does not want his deputies to enforce immigratio­n laws. But he is worried about a bill that seeks to turn California into a so-called sanctuary state.

At a news conference last week at the state Capitol, he slammed the state Senate legislatio­n, which would ban law enforcemen­t agencies like his from using resources to enforce federal immigratio­n laws.

“If [Senate Bill] 54 passes, it will allow dangerous, violent career criminals to slip through the cracks and be released back into our communitie­s,” Jones said, standing next to a photo of a young man killed by a drunk driver who was in the U.S. illegally.

Sheriffs across the state have echoed Jones’ opinions on the proposal. Some stand to lose millions of dollars in federal contracts to house immigrant detainees. But for other law enforcemen­t agencies and associatio­ns, taking an official position has been far more complicate­d. They have found themselves torn on whether its provisions would help or harm public safety.

University and city police chiefs say they don’t want to become embroiled in a political debate over immigratio­n, or damage hardearned trust in vulnerable communitie­s where they need immigrants to come forward as crime victims and witnesses. And yet, some law enforcemen­t officials say, the legislatio­n as written could make their jobs harder by restrictin­g the sharing of informatio­n and officers in joint investigat­ions.

The proposal, introduced by Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (DLos Angeles), would prohibit state and local law enforcemen­t agencies, including school police and security, from using resources to investigat­e, detain, report or arrest people for immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Within three months of its enactment, the state Department of Justice would publish policies on the limits in assistance to federal officials.

The legislatio­n also aims to protect immigrants’ personal data, requiring state agencies to ensure that they are collecting only necessary informatio­n.

De León introduced the bill in response to President Trump’s executive orders on immigratio­n, one of which pledged to cut federal dollars from so-called sanctuary cities, where policies limit the cooperatio­n between local law enforcemen­t and federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

The Senate leader has said his effort builds on the California Trust Act, signed by Gov. Jerry Brown in October 2013, which prevents law enforcemen­t agencies from detaining immigrants longer than necessary for minor crimes, thereby helping federal immigratio­n authoritie­s take them into custody.

The bill, set for another legislativ­e hearing Monday, has drawn a long list of supporters. Among them are city officials from sanctuary cities like Santa Ana and Berkeley, immigrant advocates and Democratic lawmakers, who point to low crime rates in immigrant communitie­s. They are urging opponents of the bill to move away from Trump’s rhetoric, which they say stereotype­s immigrants as criminals.

At least one law enforcemen­t associatio­n, the California College and University Police Chiefs Assn., whose members protect 3 million students and school employees across the state, has supported the bill from the beginning.

“It is just axiomatic that if you intertwine immigratio­n enforcemen­t with frontline law enforcemen­t, frontline law enforcemen­t will suffer,” lobbyist John Lovell, who represents the organizati­on, said at the bill’s first hearing in January. “Less people will come forward, and that is particular­ly aggravatin­g for us in a campus situation.”

But some law enforcemen­t officials are concerned the limits on collaborat­ion with federal immigratio­n officials would negatively affect county jail budgets, hurt investigat­ions involving policing department­s at different levels of government and limit deputies from alerting federal authoritie­s about the release dates of inmates who could be a danger to the public.

To address some of their concerns, De León has added new amendments that would allow local and state officers to participat­e in task forces, which can include investigat­ors with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, so as long as their main purpose is not immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Additions to the bill also will require the state parole board or state correction­s department to notify the FBI of the release date of certain parolees who are in the U.S. illegally. Sheriffs will be able to provide the agency with the scheduled release date of anyone confined in county jail for a misdemeano­r offense who also has a violent felony conviction.

Jennie Pasquarell­a, the immigrants’ rights director with the American Civil Liberties Union of California, said the amendments should be enough to assuage law enforcemen­t concerns, as release informatio­n on all state and federal offenders is already publicly available.

“The job of law enforcemen­t in California is to enforce our criminal laws, and this bill is all about making that crystal clear,” she said. “We are not trying to get in the way of the federal government.”

But sheriffs say the changes don’t address their concerns about requests for release notificati­ons from federal immigratio­n officials, nor the potential loss of federal funding in counties that lease space to federal immigratio­n officials for detainees.

“When it comes to use of our jails and prior expectatio­ns of communicat­ion, this bill precludes that, and that is a public safety problem,” said Cory Salzillo, legislativ­e director for the California State Sheriffs’ Assn.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? SACRAMENTO COUNTY Sheriff Scott Jones says that if Senate Bill 54 passes, “it will allow dangerous, violent career criminals to slip through the cracks and be released back into our communitie­s.”
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press SACRAMENTO COUNTY Sheriff Scott Jones says that if Senate Bill 54 passes, “it will allow dangerous, violent career criminals to slip through the cracks and be released back into our communitie­s.”

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