Los Angeles Times

CITY LOSES ITS APPEAL FOR LAPD FUNDING

Justice Department’s grant rules do not unfairly punish police in ‘sanctuary’ cities, 9th Circuit decides.

- By Maura Dolan

When Los Angeles police officials requested $3.125 million in federal funds in 2017 to hire 25 officers, they said their focus would be on “building trust and respect” through community policing.

In keeping with longstandi­ng city policy, they did not cite “illegal immigratio­n” as a focus for the new officers or indicate that the proposed hires would work with immigratio­n agents to help deport immigrants being held in local jails.

The grant money went elsewhere, and Los Angeles sued, saying it was being punished for its stance.

A federal appeals court rejected that lawsuit Friday, ruling 2 to 1 that the Trump administra­tion may give preference in awarding grants to police department­s that help federal authoritie­s nab immigrants.

The ruling by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals was a setback for Los Angeles, which won a nationwide injunction against the grant applicatio­n process last year.

Los Angeles City Atty. Mike Feuer said the city

would explore all options, including an appeal to a larger panel of the 9th Circuit.

“If this decision were to stand, this or another administra­tion could add other conditions, favoring jurisdicti­ons that criminaliz­e abortions or allow teachers to have guns in classrooms,” Feuer said.

Friday’s legal victory for President Trump followed a string of failures in his efforts to punish so-called sanctuary cities and counties.

All courts that have heard those cases decided the administra­tion could not deny communitie­s federal funds simply because they refused to assist immigratio­n agents.

At issue in the newest case was a competitiv­e grant program called the Community Oriented Policing Services, or COPS. Congress created the program in 1994 for community-based policing.

In 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice adopted a new scoring system for deciding which agencies would receive the grants. Extra points were given to department­s that wanted to hire officers to help federal authoritie­s deport immigrants.

Then-Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions announced that 80% of the new grantees had “agreed to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s in their detention facilities.”

In overturnin­g the lower court, the 9th Circuit majority said that nothing in the law that created the grant program prevents the Justice Department from giving extra points to agencies that focus on an administra­tion’s priorities.

Judge Sandra S. Ikuta, an appointee of President George W. Bush and author of the majority decision, said the “scoring process does not coerce an applicant or authorize the federal government to exercise any control over state or local law enforcemen­t.”

“Los Angeles’ decision not to select the illegal immigratio­n focus did not itself put it at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge,” Ikuta wrote.

She said “numerous” applicants received grants without having made unauthoriz­ed immigrants a priority.

“Because an applicant is free to select other prioritize­d focus areas or not to apply for a grant at all,” the program’s scoring method represente­d a mere “subtle incentive” for department­s to focus on immigratio­n, not coercion, she said.

Joining Ikuta was Judge Jay S. Bybee, also a Bush appointee.

Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw, a Clinton appointee, dissented.

Wardlaw said Congress clearly intended the funds to be used for community policing.

“The preference for applicants who abandon community partnershi­ps in favor of federal immigratio­n partnershi­ps is directly contrary to the language, structure, history, and purpose of the Act,” she wrote.

Congress did not intend to allow the Justice Department “to co-opt local and state officers into carrying out the current or any other presidenti­al administra­tion’s agenda, unrelated to community-oriented policing,” she said.

The Trump administra­tion has never given an explanatio­n beyond “abstract allusions” of how federal immigratio­n was related to community-oriented policing, Wardlaw said.

“This is no doubt because enforcemen­t of federal immigratio­n policy is entirely unrelated to community-oriented policing,” she added.

Wardlaw also questioned whether a focus on apprehendi­ng immigrants would improve public safety, noting it “could well erode the trust and mutual respect on which community policing depends.”

Feuer said the Los Angeles Police Department received the COPS grants every time it applied until Trump took office. The year before the 2017 rejection, the Police Department had received $3.125 million from the program.

“This case is important for a host of reasons,” the city attorney said.

Los Angeles has used the grants in the past to put officers in crime-ridden neighborho­ods where they coached sports teams or led mentoring programs. The department said those efforts drove down crime rates in low-income neighborho­ods.

City officials were jubilant last year when U.S. District Judge Manuel Real, who died in June, blocked the grant applicatio­n process. Joining the mayor and police chief, Feuer called the injunction a “complete victory.”

Real’s ruling said the new scoring system violated separation of powers and breached the authority given by Congress to control the purse strings.

LAPD spokesman Josh Rubenstein said the department was reviewing the decision and its effect.

The Department of Justice could not be reached for comment.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? A 9TH CIRCUIT panel ruled the U.S. may give preference to police department­s that assist immigratio­n agents when deciding which agencies will receive grants.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times A 9TH CIRCUIT panel ruled the U.S. may give preference to police department­s that assist immigratio­n agents when deciding which agencies will receive grants.

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