10/20/15, "San Francisco Votes to Keep Shielding Immigrants From Deportation Officials," NY Times, Laura M. Holson
"The Board of Supervisors upheld San Francisco’s status as a sanctuary for immigrants on Tuesday, unanimously passing a resolution that called on local law enforcement not to notify the federal authorities when unauthorized immigrants are released from custody.
The
city had been under pressure from critics of its policies on immigrants
after Kathryn Steinle, 32, a tourist from Pleasanton, Calif., was
fatally shot in the chest in July while walking with her father along
the Embarcadero waterfront. The man accused of the shooting, Juan
Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, is an unauthorized immigrant who has been
deported to Mexico five times for various felonies, including drug
charges, and had been released from a San Francisco jail shortly before
the killing.
At the same time, the board put off a vote on a hotly debated resolution that would have asked the San Francisco sheriff, Ross Mirkarimi, to rescind a March memo instructing staff members not to give information about detainees, such as immigration status, arrest records and release dates, to federal immigration officials.
At the same time, the board put off a vote on a hotly debated resolution that would have asked the San Francisco sheriff, Ross Mirkarimi, to rescind a March memo instructing staff members not to give information about detainees, such as immigration status, arrest records and release dates, to federal immigration officials.
Policies
regarding sanctuary cities vary, but San Francisco has generally
protected unauthorized immigrants without criminal records from
deportation agents.
“If
people in our community don’t trust law enforcement, no level of police
staffing is going to make our community safe,” Supervisor Malia Cohen
said as a crowd of about 250 mostly Hispanic protesters clapped and
waved their hands in support.
Ms.
Cohen said she would not be swayed by pressure from the national news
media, pundits and political candidates. “They don’t influence how I
make my decisions here in San Francisco,” she said.
Donald
J. Trump, the billionaire real estate magnate running for the
Republican presidential nomination, has blamed what he says is a lax
stand on immigration for Ms. Steinle’s death, calling it “yet another
example of why we must secure our border immediately.” Ms. Steinle’s
brother, Brad, rebuked him, telling CNN’s Anderson Cooper that Mr. Trump
was using his sister’s death for political gain.
Senator
Dianne Feinstein of California, a Democrat and former mayor of San
Francisco, has urged local officials to participate in the Department of
Homeland Security’s new Priority Enforcement Program, which the
supervisors resolved on Tuesday not to do. Ms. Feinstein wrote in a
recent letter to Mayor Edwin M. Lee that further tragedies could be
avoided if the city and county worked with immigration enforcement
officials.
Supervisor
David Campos, who entered the United States illegally from Guatemala as
a child, introduced the resolution reaffirming the city’s sanctuary
status and warned of “hysteria” on immigration. He pointed to an
audience member who he said had been in an abusive relationship but had
not wanted to leave her husband, fearing she would be deported and her
children left motherless. She now works with Mujeres Unidas y Activas, or United and Active Women, an organization that helps women who are victims of domestic violence.
By
not participating in the Priority Enforcement Program, Mr. Campos said,
San Francisco is reaffirming the commitment it had made since 1989 to
being a sanctuary. Earlier in the day, Senate Democrats blocked
Republican-backed legislation that would punish jurisdictions that do
not cooperate with federal immigration agents.
Supervisor
Mark Farrell, who wrote the resolution to rescind the sheriff’s memo,
balked at the suggestion that his measure would weaken San Francisco’s
status as a sanctuary, saying he believed the city would be safer if it
cooperated more with federal officials. He added that the mayor and
residents may not like the sheriff, but that changes should not be
politically motivated.
The
union representing sheriff’s deputies filed a complaint against Sheriff
Mirkarimi this year and asked that he rescind the memo. Mayor Lee also
asked the sheriff to amend the policy.
Neither
the union nor Mr. Lee supports Sheriff Mirkarimi’s re-election bid.
Instead, they back Vicki Hennessy, a law enforcement veteran who served
as interim sheriff in 2012 when Sheriff Mirkarimi was suspended, having
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor after being charged with domestic
violence for grabbing and bruising his wife’s arm."
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