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    Editorials
    Saturday, May 04, 2024

    Practical approaches to working with sanctuary cities

    The following editorial appeared in The Washington Post.

    President-elect Donald Trump’s threat to deport 2 million to 3 million illegal immigrants with criminal records — a flimsy number that crumbles upon scrutiny — has caused tremors in some metropolitan areas, especially those considered “sanctuary cities.” While some localities impose limits on working with federal immigration authorities, a large majority — including most regarded as sanctuary cities — do cooperate when it comes to helping to transfer and deport dangerous and violent felons scheduled to be released from jail or prison.

    The question is, what happens if Trump wants to go further by enlisting local law enforcement agencies to hand over or help sweep up undocumented immigrants convicted for small-time shoplifting, driving without a license and other minor offenses? The issue — part of a “negotiation,” in the words of Reince Priebus, Trump’s pick for White House chief of staff — is which crimes are sufficiently serious that they should trigger deportation, and reasonably require cooperation from local officials.

    A fair-minded federal standard would not require local law enforcement agencies to be pressed into service as deportation agencies chasing or handing over undocumented immigrants who have committed minor offenses. To do so would subvert relations between law enforcement and local immigrant communities, in which trust and cooperation are critical.

    A fair-minded local standard would ensure that police, sheriffs and corrections officials see to it that dangerous criminals — violent felons and those convicted of multiple serious offenses, drunk drivers, sex abusers, drug dealers — do not slip through the cracks.

    That has happened in some isolated instances, which provided Trump with fodder for his campaign pledge to “end” sanctuary cities. The most notorious case involved San Francisco, where the sheriff’s office last year ignored a detainer — an official request from federal immigration officials seeking custody of an undocumented immigrant with a long record of drug offenses. Rather than being transferred to the feds, the man was released; soon after, he killed a tourist who was strolling on the city’s waterfront.

    San Francisco’s policy is irresponsible. The city has gone out of its way to defy federal officials, as have some other localities in California. But those jurisdictions are outliers.

    The Trump administration is entitled to seek fair and consistent standards that protect communities from dangerous criminals without poisoning relations between local law enforcement and immigrant communities. Better to negotiate terms than punish millions of Americans by suspending billions in federal funding to localities.

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