Trump wants to break California性视界传媒檚 sanctuary state law: 5 things to know

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrest an immigrant considered a threat to public safety and national security during an early morning raid in Compton on June 6, 2022.

Back in the Oval Office, President Donald Trump is once again trying to break a policy California Democrats adopted during his first term to protect certain undocumented immigrants from being deported.

One of his first executive orders targets the state性视界传媒檚 so-called sanctuary law, which generally limits how local cops interact with federal immigration officers. Trump性视界传媒檚 order, titled the 性视界传媒淧rotecting the American People Against Invasion性视界传媒, would deny federal funds to sanctuary jurisdictions across the country.

It性视界传媒檚 not clear yet what kind of federal funds the Trump administration would withhold. But, for a state of 39 million people that relies heavily on federal dollars for its public programs and currently for its wildfire recovery, withholding money could be a crippling blow.

It性视界传媒檚 worth noting that Trump attempted something similar during his first term. California sued and the courts sided with the state.

Before Trump took office, a nonprofit led by his policy adviser Stephen Miller sent letters to hundreds of local elected officials around the country warning them they faced 性视界传媒渓egal consequences性视界传媒 if their sanctuary policies interfered with immigration enforcement.

So what does the state性视界传媒檚 sanctuary law do exactly and what does it mean for Trump性视界传媒檚 mass deportation plans?

Here are five things to know about the California Values Act.

It性视界传媒檚 about what California cops can do

In October 2017, Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law Senate Bill 54, the California Values Act, commonly referred to as the state性视界传媒檚 sanctuary law. That law bars state and local police from investigating, interrogating, or arresting people for immigration enforcement purposes, and limits 性视界传媒 but does not entirely prohibit 性视界传媒 police cooperation with federal immigration officials.

Kevin De Leon, the former state Senate leader who authored the law, told NPR in 2017 that the point of the law was to make clear that the feds cannot enlist local police 性视界传媒渁s a cog in the Trump deportation machine.性视界传媒

The 性视界传媒渟anctuary性视界传媒 movement goes back to the 1980s when Central American refugees fled civil war and immigrated to the U.S. When they were denied asylum, they sought protection from deportation in churches and other places of worship.

Today the sanctuary law does not actually refer to a place or territory where immigrants can seek protection. Living in California alone does not shield someone from deportation.

Instead, the law clarifies what state and local law enforcement in California can and cannot do with regard to immigration. For example, the law says that local police cannot detain or keep someone in custody more than 48 hours past their release date just for immigration officials to pick them up.

The law does not restrict what the federal government can do in the state. To be clear, that means U.S Immigration Customs and Enforcement (ICE) can still arrest and deport undocumented people living in California and other sanctuary jurisdictions.

性视界传媒淭he federal government has a lane that they are entitled to move in, they can enforce immigration law,性视界传媒 California Attorney General Rob Bonta said last week during a press conference in San Diego. But 性视界传媒淭hey can性视界传媒檛 conscript or force the city or the county or the state law enforcement entities to do their job for them.性视界传媒

Who isn性视界传媒檛 protected by sanctuary law

President Trump and his allies have repeatedly argued that sanctuary laws shield dangerous criminals. They have at times pointed to specific crimes committed by undocumented immigrants to argue the sanctuary law puts the greater public at risk. In 2019, for example, Trump pointed to the slaying of a police officer in Stanislaus County to criticize the sanctuary law and demand more funding for border protection.

But that性视界传媒檚 not the whole story. The law says police can tell immigration authorities about an inmate性视界传媒檚 upcoming release if that person has been convicted of a serious crime or felony, such as: murder, rape, kidnapping, robbery and arson, among many others.

And as some sheriffs have noted, there is nothing that stops immigration officials from using jail websites and fingerprints databases to identify people of interest.

It is up to ICE to pick up individuals on their release. Between 2018 and 2023, California jails transferred more than 4,000 individuals to immigration authorities. At the same time, ICE doesn性视界传媒檛 always show up when someone is released from jail or prison. For example, ICE picked up about 80% of undocumented immigrants released from state prisons between 2017 and 2020, according to a 2022 Senate legislative analysis.

性视界传媒淚t is an absurdity to be talking about SB 54 as preventing bad, non-citizens with serious criminal convictions from being turned over to (the Department of Homeland Security), it doesn性视界传媒檛 do that,性视界传媒 said Niels Frenzen, a professor at USC性视界传媒檚 Gould School of Law and co-director of the school性视界传媒檚 immigration clinic. 性视界传媒淏ut those facts are just not part of the political debate.性视界传媒

Immigrants who are protected by the sanctuary state law are usually those who are arrested for less serious offenses, such as traffic violations and driving without a license or insurance, Frenzen said.

Courts upheld California性视界传媒檚 sanctuary state law

After California enacted its Values Act, Trump性视界传媒檚 Justice Department took the state to court, arguing that the state law 性视界传媒渋nterferes with federal immigration authorities性视界传媒 ability to carry out their responsibilities under federal law.性视界传媒

Some immigration attorneys, however, have pointed out that the state law seemed to have little impact on ICE性视界传媒檚 ability to do its job.

For example, the Justice Department in its 2018 lawsuit said that in 2017 ICE apprehended 20,201 unlawfully present people in California, which represented about 14% of all ICE arrests made that year.

ICE was on track to exceed that number in the following year. In the first two months of 2018 after the sanctuary law took effect, it arrested 8,588 people in California, or about 14% of all arrests nationwide, according to a filing in the lawsuit by Trump性视界传媒檚 Justice Department.

In 2019, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the California Values Act did not impede enforcement of federal immigration law. When the Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to review the case, it refused to do so, leaving the law as is.

In a separate fight, California sued the Trump administration for its policy to withhold federal law enforcement grants from jurisdictions with sanctuary policies. A federal judge sided with California.

Studies show no effect on crime

Critics of the law have long claimed that the sanctuary state law harms public safety. The Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank at Stanford, for example, has linked the law to the fentanyl epidemic, noting that a spike in fentanyl-related deaths started happening around 2018, soon after the sanctuary policy went into effect. Whether causation or coincidence, there isn性视界传媒檛 much in the way of official research that proves this.

To prove such a claim, one would have to isolate the sanctuary state law性视界传媒檚 specific impact on crime, researchers say.

A 2020 analysis of California性视界传媒檚 law by researchers at the University of California, Irvine examined the state性视界传媒檚 2018 violent and property crime rates and compared them to estimated crime rates had Gov. Brown not signed the sanctuary policy. The study found that the law did not have a significant impact on either violent crime or property crime.

Charis Kubrin, who authored the study, said the takeaway of her research was that changing the state性视界传媒檚 sanctuary status is not likely to result in major reductions in crime. 性视界传媒淕etting rid of SB 54, for example, is not going to make crime go down because it didn性视界传媒檛 cause crime to go up in the first place,性视界传媒 Kubrin said.

A separate study by researchers at Stanford and Princeton looked at sanctuary policies across the country and found that these measures reduce the overall number of deportations by one-third, but they did not reduce the number of deportations on people with violent criminal convictions.

That study also found that these policies don性视界传媒檛 have much of a direct effect on crime.

Conflict expected in 性视界传媒榮ensitive areas性视界传媒

During the Biden administration, the federal government had in place a 性视界传媒渟ensitive areas性视界传媒 order, which discouraged immigration agents from making arrests in places like schools, hospitals, churches and courthouses. Last week, the Trump administration rescinded that order.

性视界传媒淲hen ICE engages in civil immigration enforcement actions in or near courthouses it can reduce safety risks to the public,性视界传媒 reads a Jan. 21 memo to staff from ICE Acting Director Caleb Vitello.

The sanctuary state law asks officials at the same places to adopt policies to limit public participation with immigration enforcement, such as requesting a warrant from ICE agents before they attempt to arrest anyone. That could create a conflict for local officials if the immigration crackdown in the new administration hits their venue, said Alvaro Huerta, director of litigation and advocacy at Immigrant Defenders Law Center.

Given Trump性视界传媒檚 recent rule reversal, Huerta said, 性视界传媒渢he federal government may attempt some (immigration) enforcement in those spaces, but the state government is asking those spaces to require warrants.性视界传媒

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