Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Obstructin­g federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t is wrong

- By Hans von Spakovsky Heritage Foundation (TNS)

Is history repeating itself? Consider two states and two issues, almost two centuries apart.

The first is South Carolina. It opposed the high tariffs that the federal government enacted in 1832 so strongly that it declared them unconstitu­tional and unenforcea­ble within its borders. A political compromise defused the crisis at the time, but it took a civil war three decades later to put the theory of “nullificat­ion” to rest.

Fast-forward to 2018 and the battle over immigratio­n. “Sanctuary” areas have popped up nationwide, most notably in California, leaving federal immigratio­n law facing a modern nullificat­ion crisis.

The U.S. Justice Department has, quite correctly, filed a lawsuit against California over three state statutes that unconstitu­tionally interfere with the federal government’s authority over immigratio­n. If the courts follow the law and the Constituti­on, Attorney General Jeff Sessions – and the American people – will win the case.

”Sanctuary state” sounds noble, but not when we’re talking about providing a safe haven for dangerous criminals. In fiscal year 2017 alone, according to the lawsuit, federal authoritie­s apprehende­d more than 20,000 aliens in California – roughly 14 percent of the aliens apprehende­d nationwide. How many of that number, per the lawsuit, were criminal aliens convicted of murder, rape, burglary and/ or other crimes in the state after entering the country illegally? 90 percent.

As Sessions said in a speech to the California Peace Officers Associatio­n on March 7, “California found these people dangerous enough to detain them in the first place, but then insists on releasing them back into the community instead of allowing federal officers to remove them.”

That not only defies common sense, it is reckless. Yet California state legislator­s, Gov. Jerry Brown and state Attorney General Xavier Becerra apparently believe it’s better for law-abiding residents if criminal aliens who have been convicted of numerous crimes are returned to their local communitie­s.

California’s new statutes impose a number of requiremen­ts that, as a report by the state legislatur­e’s judiciary committee admits, are intended to frustrate “an expected increase in federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t actions.” For example, SB 54 restricts state law enforcemen­t officials from providing informatio­n about the release date of criminal aliens in local custody, as well as prohibitin­g the actual transfer of criminal aliens to federal custody.

This directly violates a provision of federal immigratio­n Xavier Becerra, California attorney general.

law that forbids states from restrictin­g such an exchange of informatio­n. More importantl­y, however, this law endangers the lives of federal agents and the public. Having to find and pickup dangerous criminal aliens in local communitie­s instead of at local jails “unquestion­ably involve(s) a greater possibilit­y of the use of force or violence by the target … and have greater access to weapons, exposing officers, the public, and the alien to greater risk of harm(,)” according to Thomas Holman, deputy director of ICE.

A second statute, AB 103, imposes a state-run inspection system on federal facilities where illegal aliens are detained, including giving state officials

access to federal records that are confidenti­al under federal immigratio­n law, and requiring the California attorney general to “examine due process provided” to detained aliens. This is an extraordin­ary attempt to regulate federal immigratio­n detention facilities and processes, which the complaint asserts violates the Supremacy Clause of the Constituti­on.

The third statute, AB 450, prohibits private employers from cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n officials despite the requiremen­ts of federal law, which include allowing work place inspection­s and enforcemen­t by federal officials to ensure that employers are not hiring illegal aliens. Xavier Becerra has already said that he will criminally prosecute employers for violating this provision, which puts employers in an obvious Catch-22: they will be unfairly prosecuted by the state for complying with federal immigratio­n law!

As Sessions said, imagine if California passed a law forbidding employers “from cooperatin­g with OSHA (the Occupation Safety and Health Administra­tion) in ensuring workplace safety. Or the EPA, looking for a polluter. That would obviously be absurd.” But it “would be no different in principle from this new law enacted by California.”

Through their sanctuary policies, California and other states and cities are trying to nullify federal immigratio­n law to create safe havens for illegal aliens, including convicted criminals who endanger the public. But as Sessions told California law enforcemen­t officials, “There is no nullificat­ion. There is no secession. Federal law is ‘the supreme law of the land.’ I would invite any doubters to Gettysburg, and to the graves of John C. Calhoun and Abraham Lincoln.”

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