New
Sanctuary Cities in Texas Vow to Resist Donald Trump’s
Deportations
By Jordan Smith
November 29,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- A
decidedly despondent contingent of city and county
elected officials gathered at city hall in Austin,
Texas, on November 17 for a press conference designed to
address residents’ “safety concerns” following the
election of Donald Trump as the next president of the
United States.
In particular,
the officials — including the city’s mayor, several city
council members, and the newly elected district attorney
and sheriff — sought to quell the concerns of the city’s
sizable immigrant population, given the nasty,
xenophobic rhetoric espoused by Trump and his
surrogates. “My message,” said council member Greg Casar,
“to the people who fear, justifiably, in their hearts
what is to come, is that before they come for you, they
have to come through me.”
The county’s
Democratic sheriff-elect, Sally Hernandez, was resolute:
“The sheriff’s office will not be part of a deportation
force that sacrifices hundreds and thousands of people,
our neighbors, to a broken federal immigration system.”
Hernandez ran
on a platform that included
ending the county’s commitment to honor “detainer”
requests made by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. Such requests ask that the county hold for
ICE pick-up anyone booked into the county jail that the
feds suspect might be in the country illegally.
Hernandez’s
campaign promise put Austin on a trajectory to become
the state’s first official so-called sanctuary city, a
move praised by residents, activists, and city officials
alike — that has also put the city, along with
hundreds of other jurisdictions like it across the
country, on a collision course with the Trump
administration. Trump has vowed to undertake
mass deportation of immigrants and to withhold
millions in federal funds from jurisdictions that would
try to stand in his way. “Cities that refuse to
cooperate with federal authorities,” he said, “will not
receive taxpayer dollars.”
Although there
is no legal definition of what a sanctuary city is, the
term is colloquially bestowed on cities or counties that
have policies limiting or refusing local law enforcement
cooperation with federal immigration enforcement
authorities.
In practice,
that has generally meant refusing to cooperate with ICE
detainer requests made under an Obama-era program called
Secure Communities, or S-Comm, and its progeny, the
newly named but
largely unchanged Priority Enforcement Program.
Under S-Comm, fingerprints collected by local jailers
are shared via the FBI database with immigration
authorities. If ICE gets a hit on a person thought to be
in the country illegally, it issues a detainer request
to the local jail, asking that the city or county hold
the individual — even beyond the person’s term of
incarceration or after a person has made bail — until
ICE can come to pick them up.
Under S-Comm,
ICE regularly asked for detainers on immigrants
regardless of how minor their alleged crime, a problem
that the Department of Homeland Security sought to
improve upon by saying that those considered a threat to
national security should be the priority. Otherwise,
under PEP, the extraction program has remained the same;
ICE has merely added the option of having the jail
inform the agency when a person will be released instead
of continuing to hold them in the jail.
Participation
in S-Comm, which Trump has vowed to re-up in its
original form, was instrumental in securing the
record-setting
2.5 million deportations carried out during the
first six years of Obama’s tenure, leading some
advocates to dub the president “Deporter in Chief.”
Under Greg
Hamilton, the outgoing Democratic sheriff of Travis
County, Texas, where Austin is located, the city ranked
third in the nation for the rate of deportations
initiated under S-Comm, a fact that enraged advocates,
residents, and some local officials. In 2014, the city,
which has no control over the sheriff or operations at
the county jail, passed a
resolution denouncing the program and imploring the
sheriff to discontinue his office’s participation in it.
Hamilton refused — repeatedly
saying he had no choice but to participate — and his
recalcitrance almost certainly influenced voters’ choice
of Hernandez from a wide field of primary candidates
aiming to replace him.
Hamilton was
not the only veteran sheriff ousted from office this
month by Texas voters frustrated in part by hardline
positions on immigration and a too cozy relationship
with ICE. In San Antonio, police Sgt. Javier Salazar,
who boasted of his role in crafting a department policy
that forbids officers from inquiring about immigration
status, defeated Republican incumbent Sheriff Susan
Pamerleau, whose position was that current immigration
enforcement isn’t punitive enough. “My issue is, when
they commit a crime, there’s not a law today that
requires that they be removed from the United States,”
she
said. (Notably, however, Salazar has said he would
follow PEP.)
And in Harris
County, where Houston is located, Sheriff-elect Ed
Gonzalez campaigned in part on ending his county’s
participation in an even more insidious ICE program
known as 287(g). Under that strategy, local law
enforcement officers are actually deputized by the
federal agency, and instead of merely granting a
detainer request are tasked with ferreting out the
immigration status of those in their custody. “I hope
that we could move away from regressive type of policies
that are impactful, especially to one large segment of
the community, which is the Latino community in this
case,” he said. Gonzalez
said that he has concerns about the program
violating due process rights, putting a strain on
community relations, and encouraging racial profiling.
Indeed, it’s
not only S-Comm that Trump wants to bring back to life,
but he is also a fan of the 287(g) program, which he has
called a “popular” program that he would like to “expand
and revitalize.” At it appears that is among the
proposals that Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach
took with him to his meeting with Trump, who has tagged
Kobach as a potential head of DHS. In a photo of Kobach
taken November 20, the anti-immigrant zealot had
in his hand a paper titled as his “strategic plan”
for Trump’s first year in office, which includes
deporting a “record number of criminal aliens” — in
part, it seems, by increasing the reach of the 287(g)
program to include “at least 70 cities and counties.”
At present,
there are just 32 jurisdictions involved in
287(g) partnerships with ICE — all of them based in
jail operations. But there’s no reason to think that a
“revitalized” 287(g) program would be limited to
operations behind bars. Instead, it would likely make it
back out onto the streets — as a “task force”
partnership — where beat cops are imbued with
immigration enforcement power. Those partnerships were
scrapped in 2012, following allegations that they
encouraged racial profiling and inflamed distrust
between police and the communities they serve. The
misuse of the 287(g) is one of the legacies of the
infamous and recently ousted sheriff of Maricopa County,
Arizona, Joe Arpaio.
In all,
advocates and experts are concerned by Trump’s apparent
dedication to amplifying immigration programs that have
been fraught with abuse. “Outsourcing federal
immigration enforcement to localities is expensive in
terms of costs to local communities, but also in terms
of community safety and trust,” Michele Waslin, senior
research and policy analyst for the American Immigration
Council wrote in an email to The Intercept. “Given the
evidence of racial profiling and civil rights
violations, and the harm to community relations and
community safety that 287(g) can create, we feel that
going back to [that] program and [to] Secure Communities
would be incredibly harmful to local communities and
would invite civil rights abuses.”
Not only are
the programs abusive, but in the case of S-Comm,
unconstitutional — according to a string of recent
court cases in which judges have found that the
unlawful detention of a person absent probable cause is
a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
That fact, in
turn, may make it difficult for a Trump administration
to attack so-called sanctuary cities by threatening to
withhold federal funding. “You can’t coerce [someone]
through federal funding to do something that is
unconstitutional,” said Lena Graber, special projects
attorney for the Immigrant Legal Resource Center.
That defect may
also impact states that align themselves with Trump’s
thinking and pass — or attempt to pass — laws that would
punish cities or counties that uphold their community
values by adopting sanctuary city policies. Texas
lawmakers, for example, have tried multiple times to
pass just such a law. This year, the governor and
lieutenant governor have made
its passage a priority, and activists are gearing up
for what they believe will be a tough legislative
session. “I think we’re in for a real fight this year,”
said Bob Libal, executive director of the activist group
Grassroots Leadership. “If there’s anything this
election shows us it’s that you can get elected by
appealing to the worst in people when it comes to
immigration — the worst.”
But simply
endorsing the flawed federal program at the state level
does not cure its constitutional defects, says Jonathan
Blazer, advocacy and policy counsel for the ACLU. “If
there are Fourth Amendment constitutional problems with
ICE’s use of detainers, or the actions that localities
take in response to detainers, it does nothing to fix
those constitutional problems for [states like Texas] to
mandate that localities honor all detainers,
constitutional or not,” he wrote in an email to The
Intercept. “In fact, it serves to exacerbate the
incidence of constitutional violation, and make the
state susceptible itself to challenges that had
previously been focused on ICE and localities.”
But even if the
program did pass constitutional muster, it still might
be tough for a Trump administration to use money to
punish cities like Austin, Los Angeles, Chicago, Santa
Fe, New Mexico, New York City, Denver, Washington, D.C.,
and Seattle — among
others — by threatening to withhold funding. In
general, the concept of federalism (or “states’ rights”
as many a Republican politician reiterated ad nauseam
during Obama’s two terms) bars the feds from
commandeering local governments to carry out federal
policies. The “current threats, to ‘defund’
jurisdictions for not wanting to expend local law
enforcement resources to carry out federal immigration
enforcement, run directly into the core constitutional
value of federalism,” Cody Wofsy, Immigrants’ Rights
Project attorney at the ACLU, wrote in an email.
Even if Trump’s
plan didn’t violate the principle of federalism, it
still might be a tough legal pull. Though federal
programs often come with strings attached, the Supreme
Court has said that those strings can’t be so onerous
that they could be considered coercive. And where the
government seeks uniformity in policy among the states
and threatens to withhold funding as a means to achieve
it, it must also demonstrate that the funding it chooses
to withhold is reasonably related to the problematic
policy. So the federal government could potentially seek
to withhold policing-related funds from a sanctuary
city, for example, but restricting access to broader
pots of money, say Community Development Block Grants,
likely would not work.
“Trump can’t
with the stroke of a pen end sanctuary cities or cut off
funding to cities and states that he believes have
sanctuary policies,” the ACLU’s Blazer said in an email.
“There are a number of programs that fund cities and
states and each of these programs has their own rules,
regulations, contracts. Trump can’t just decide to flip
a funding switch off, to penalize cities and states that
are doing nothing wrong and for which no authority to
penalize exists.”
Indeed, even
the National Fraternal Order of Police, which endorsed
Trump, has said that threatening to withhold law
enforcement-related funds from cities that refuse to
retreat from their sanctuary policies is ill-advised.
“We do not support the withholding of public safety
funds as a hammer,”
said James Pasco, the police union’s executive
director. “You can’t hold people’s safety over their
heads to get them to come to your point of view.”
Obama’s Use of Unreliable Gang
Databases for Deportations Could Be a Model for Trump:
California Senate President Pro Tem Kevin De León called
Trump’s plan “catastrophic” and vowed that the state
would “aggressively avail ourselves of any and all
tools” to protect the rights of undocumented residents. |