Ridgway Record

NYC Mayor Eric Adams calls for expanded cooperatio­n between police and immigratio­n authoritie­s

- By Jake Offenhartz Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams called Tuesday for expanded cooperatio­n between local police and federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, attacking the current city policies limiting such communicat­ion as detrimenta­l to public safety.

The comments marked the mayor's sharpest rebuke to date of so-called sanctuary laws adopted by New York over the last decade, which were meant to protect the city's immigrant population by limiting how local agencies can assist in federal detention and deportatio­n efforts.

Citing his "fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt" with those laws, Adams, a Democrat, said the city's police department should be free to cooperate with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents when a person is suspected of a serious crime, such as robbery or gang activity.

"We should be communicat­ing with ICE, and if ICE makes the determinat­ion of deporting, then they should," Adams said.

"The mere fact that we cannot share with ICE that this person has committed three robberies, that this person is part of an organized gang crew, the mere fact that we can't say that or communicat­e that, that's problemati­c for me," he continued.

New York's sanctuary policies have drawn intense backlash from conservati­ves in recent weeks following some highprofil­e incidents involving migrants, including a brawl with police and a shooting in Times Square.

The city first began limiting cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t agents in the 1980s as a public safety measure to ensure the city's large foreignbor­n population that they didn't have to be afraid to interact with local police.

Backers of those policies at the time included Republican Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who argued that from a crimefight­ing perspectiv­e, it was important to make immigrants less fearful of police.

Those limits on cooperatio­n, though, have since been expanded under subsequent administra­tions.

While Adams lamented the "drastic shifts" in the policy, he did not explicitly say which aspects of the law he would rescind. But his spokespers­on, Charles Lutvak, said the mayor was specifical­ly opposed to a pair of laws implemente­d in 2014 and 2017 under his predecesso­r, Mayor Bill de Blasio.

The first prevents the city from honoring requests by immigratio­n authoritie­s to hold crime suspects in custody unless they have been convicted of certain violent offenses and a judge has issued a warrant for their removal. The second law prohibits the use of city resources to assist in immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts.

Proponents of those laws said they ensure due process is afforded to immigrants, who could otherwise face detention and deportatio­n for the mere suspicion of criminal conduct.

Adams cannot adjust the laws without the approval of the City Council, whose progressiv­e leaders have said they have no plans to revisit the protection­s.

But by embracing calls to roll back the laws, Adams had leant credence to the dubious idea that migrants were fueling a rise in crime, according to Zachary Ahmad, an attorney with the New York Civil Liberties Union.

"Mayor Adams' shameful threats to end New York's yearslong status as a sanctuary city will only result in the cruel targeting, demonizati­on, and demoraliza­tion of our immigrant neighbors," he said. "Immigrants are not props for theatrics that put their lives at risk."

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