The Denver Post

Colorado Springs, Aurora bend their knee to Texas’ Abbott

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Seven of Aurora’s 10 City Council members used their time and power Monday night to reiterate that police in the city will check the immigratio­n status of people and tell ICE what it wants and needs to know for potential deportatio­n cases.

The message is loud and clear: If you’re one of the hundreds of thousands of immigrants living in Aurora without legal status, you should be more than a little leery of the police just in case U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t has your name on a list.

We already spent time last month decrying silly resolution­s that are needlessly divisive and have zero actual impact on public policy. Our local and state elected officials can stop spitting in the wind anytime they get tired of the blowback.

Did Aurora City Council members really think this resolution would magically erect a wall along the city limits to prevent refugees and asylum seekers from entering from Denver? No, far more likely is that the seven members of the council who approved the message were hopeful it would appease Texas Gov. Greg Abbott so he wouldn’t target them as a final destinatio­n for people who recently crossed the southern border.

Despite the line saying that the city “demands that other municipali­ties and entities do not systematic­ally transport migrants” to Aurora, the resolution feels more like bowing down than standing up. So did a similarly spineless resolution doubling down as a “non-sanctuary city” approved by a majority of City Council members in Colorado Springs and in Fremont County.

So what exactly is a sanctuary city? That’s open to interpreta­tion, but helpfully, the Aurora City Council is very specific in using the definition that President Donald Trump adopted with an executive order shortly after he took office in 2017. Trump defined “sanctuary jurisdicti­ons” as any “jurisdicti­ons that willfully refuse to comply with 8 U.S.C. 1373.”

8 U.S.C 1373 is a simple federal law barring state and local government­s from refusing to give informatio­n “regarding the citizenshi­p or immigratio­n status, lawful or unlawful, of any individual” to federal agencies tasked with overseeing immigratio­n and enforcing immigratio­n laws.

The Denver Post editorial board has long advocated for a moderate approach on this issue. Dangerous criminals who are in the U.S. must be caught and deported (or put in prison and deported upon release). Contributi­ng members of society who are here without legal status must be able to access our emergency services without the fear that their immigratio­n status will be handed over to ICE officials.

Denver, like all cities, has at times failed this careful balance with tragic result. We all remember Ever Valles, who walked free from a Denver jail in December 2016 despite an ICE detainer marking him as an “immigratio­n enforcemen­t priority” only to participat­e in killing a man at an RTD light rail station a few months later.

Our hearts break for the family of Laken Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student who police suspect was killed by a Venezuelan border crosser who had been targeted for detainment by immigratio­n officials.

The suspect had been arrested in New York, but ICE said it failed to issue a detainer before he was released.

But these Colorado municipali­ties are not simply reaffirmin­g their commitment to keep dangerous criminals out of the city. They are tying tragic cases such as this to people who have braved difficult conditions and have left their lives and sometimes their families behind to start new in America. Yes, some violent criminals also have made their way north among those seeking refuge in the U.S. They should be arrested and deported.

Aurora, Colorado Springs and Fremont County passed resolution­s that will do nothing to prevent Abbott and others from sending busloads of migrants, refugees and immigrants to their communitie­s.

What they have done instead is send a bone-chilling message to immigrants — some of whom have called their communitie­s home for decades — that police in their community most definitely will not provide sanctuary. After all the council is “resolved” not to be labeled a sanctuary city.

Instead of passing a meaningles­s attempt to appease Abbott, these communitie­s should have crafted actual policies to help immigrants and refugees.

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