Los Angeles Times

Judge largely upholds ban on private prisons in state

Tentative ruling backs law that also covers immigrant facilities

- By Andrea Castillo

A federal judge in San Diego issued a tentative ruling Thursday that largely upholds California’s ban on private prison contracts.

GEO Group, a Florida private prison company, filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in San Diego days before Assembly Bill 32 took effect Jan. 1. The law prohibits new for-profit detention contracts and changes to current contracts, and phases out existing facilities entirely by 2028.

The lawsuit challenges Gov. Gavin Newsom and state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra. It alleges that AB 32 is a “transparen­t attempt by the state to shut down the federal government’s detention efforts within California’s borders” and asks the court to forbid the state from enforcing the statute. A month after the lawsuit was filed, the Trump administra­tion followed with its own lawsuit making claims similar to those of GEO Group.

U.S. District Judge Janis Sammartino consolidat­ed the two lawsuits during a virtual hearing Thursday attended by more than 100 people. She called the suits “fascinatin­g and complex.”

Sammartino suggested she was likely to dismiss most of the case against California, as well as a request to temporaril­y suspend enforcemen­t of the law while the case continues in court.

“AB 32 does not unconstitu­tionally discrimina­te against the federal government or its contractor­s,” she said.

Sammartino referenced the case challengin­g Senate Bill 54, California’s “sanctuary” law, and similarly recognized that state leaders have authority to ensure the health and welfare of inmates and detainees within their borders.

But she suggested she would uphold the case as applied to facilities used by the U.S. Marshals Service, which holds federal inmates charged with criminal immigratio­n offenses, such as entering the country illegally or reentering after a deportatio­n.

Immigrant rights advocates said Sammartino’s tentative ruling was just the beginning of what they expect to be a long court process, including appeals.

According to the lawsuit, AB 32 affects 10 privately managed prison and immigrant detention facilities in California with nearly 11,000 total beds — the vast majority of federal detention capacity in the state. GEO Group manages seven of those facilities, including the Adelanto and Mesa Verde immigratio­n facilities.

Pro-immigratio­n activists have long alleged poor conditions, including substandar­d medical care and documented safety violations, inside facilities run by GEO and other private prison companies. They called the lawsuit an “illicit scheme by ICE and prison corporatio­ns to evade accountabi­lity.”

Jordan Wells, a staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, called the ruling remarkable.

“The ruling is as much about ICE’s private prison enterprise across the country as it is about the ban on it here in California,” he said. “Because if California can do it, then other states can as well.”

GEO officials have said that although they play no role in immigratio­n laws and take no positions on immigratio­n policies, it is unconstitu­tional for a state to regulate the actions of the federal government and its contractor­s.

GEO Group attorney Charles Cooper argued that because private contractor­s operate on behalf of the federal government, “This prohibitio­n, even though it focuses on the person operating the facility, is nonetheles­s a prohibitio­n on the entire government.”

Michael Kirk, who also represente­d GEO, said Congress grants the federal government the discretion to choose the “most efficient and best” option for American taxpayers.

“The history is critically important here,” he said. “Going back to the mid-1980s, it’s been well known ... to everyone that ICE has been using private facilities to carry out its detention obligation.”

But Deputy Atty. Gen. Gabrielle Boutin argued that Congress did not grant the federal government blanket authority to detain people without guidance. She said AB 32 was enacted to protect the health and welfare of inmates and detainees in California.

“It was made after widespread findings that private detention facilities have safety problems,” she said.

GEO’s lawsuit was filed in December, days after federal officials signed contracts totaling nearly $6.5 billion with GEO and the two other companies that run California’s four private immigrant detention centers.

If private detention facilities were outlawed in California, there would in effect be one facility in the state where ICE could hold detainees: Yuba County Jail, which has 220 beds. ICE has said that the closures would force detainees to be transferre­d out of state, away from family and lawyers.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? THE LAWSUIT against California officials was filed by GEO Group, which runs seven privately managed prison and detention facilities in the state, including the immigratio­n center in Adelanto, above.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times THE LAWSUIT against California officials was filed by GEO Group, which runs seven privately managed prison and detention facilities in the state, including the immigratio­n center in Adelanto, above.

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