-
Maryland man convicted of raping his stepson’s 12-year-old girlfriend - 3 mins ago
-
FanDuel Promo Code: Bet $5, Win $150 MLB Bonus Continues - 16 mins ago
-
Home prices are dropping in some regions of the U.S. Here’s where. - 18 mins ago
-
Carrie Underwood shows off natural hair color she hasn’t seen since age 12 - 21 mins ago
-
CDC warns of mosquito-borne chikungunya outbreak in southeast China - 22 mins ago
-
The World Is Dan Hurley’s Playground: UConn Strikes Gold with Furphy and Reibe - 32 mins ago
-
Small California city ordered to shelter in place due to dust cloud - 36 mins ago
-
Man convicted of killing girlfriend, her teen son, and locking bodies in a bedroom before fleeing - 47 mins ago
-
Shaq Places Stunning Wager on Cowboys’ Week 1 Matchup - 55 mins ago
-
Teddi Mellencamp reflects on alleged affair with horse trainer amid cancer battle - about 1 hour ago
Justice Department releases list of sanctuary jurisdictions
The Department of Justice published a new list Tuesday of ‘sanctuary’ jurisdictions that it claims have policies, laws or regulations that obstruct enforcement of federal immigration laws.
But while the list includes the Trump administration’s typical targets — the city of Los Angeles and the state of California — one local area is not on it: L.A. County.
Los Angeles county has not formally declared itself a sanctuary jurisdiction. However, the county that is home to more than 2 million residents who are undocumented or living with undocumented family members was included on a previous DHS list of sanctuary jurisdictions published in May. That list was subsequently removed from the DHS website.
In a news release, the Department of Justice said Tuesday that the new federal list of 35 cities, counties and states — a much lower figure than the hundreds of jurisdictions that appeared on the previous DHS list — is “not exhaustive” and “will be updated as federal authorities gather further information.”
A spokesperson for the Justice Department did not answer specific questions from The Times about why L.A. County was not on the list.
“These designations were made after a thorough review of documented laws, ordinances, and executive directives by the listed jurisdictions,” the agency states on its website. “This initial list of designated Sanctuary Jurisdictions will be reviewed regularly, to include additional jurisdictions and remove jurisdictions that have remediated their policies, practices, and laws. Each state, county, and city will have an opportunity to respond to its placement on the list.”
The new list is just the latest effort by the Trump administration to ramp up pressure on cities, counties and states that have policies or laws that restrict collaboration with federal immigration authorities.
But it also represents a more targeted focus. The previous DHS list sparked ridicule for its errors. The list included most of California’s 58 counties and even the conservative city of Huntington Beach, which declared itself a nonsanctuary city a few days after Trump took office and sued the state of California for its sanctuary policies.
Now that the Department of Justice has winnowed down its inventory of offenders, California is one of 13 states, mostly on the west coast and in the northeast, that the Trump administration has identified as having policies or laws that impede federal immigration agents.
Only four county jurisdictions across the country are included in the Department of Justice list: Baltimore County, MD; Cook County, IL; San Diego, County and San Francisco County. Three of the 18 cities on the list — Berkeley, Los Angeles and San Francisco — are in California.
“Sanctuary policies impede law enforcement and put American citizens at risk by design,” Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement Tuesday. “The Department of Justice will continue bringing litigation against sanctuary jurisdictions and work closely with the Department of Homeland Security to eradicate these harmful policies around the country.”
In April, Trump signed an Executive Order, ‘Protecting American Communities from Criminal Aliens, ’ directing the Justice Department to work with DHS to publish a list of jurisdictions that “continue to use their authority to violate, obstruct, and defy the enforcement of Federal immigration laws.”
The Justice Department has since taken legal action against a number of sanctuary jurisdictions.
In June, the agency filed a federal lawsuit against the city of Los Angeles, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, and the L.A. City Council that described L.A.’s sanctuary law as “illegal.”
Officials, the lawsuit said, “refuse to cooperate or share information, even when requested, with federal immigration authorities.”
“Jurisdictions like Los Angeles that flout federal law by prioritizing illegal aliens over American citizens are undermining law enforcement at every level,” Bondi said in a June statement. “It ends under President Trump.”
In July, Bondi announced a “major victory” for the Department of Justice: the city of Louisville, Kentucky, she said, was ditching its sanctuary policies after receiving a letter from her office.
“This should set an example to other cities,” Bondi said on X last month. “Instead of forcing us to sue you — which we will, without hesitation — follow the law, get rid of sanctuary policies, and work with us to fix the illegal immigration crisis.
On Tuesday, the Justice Department said in a news release that “the federal government will assist any jurisdiction that desires to be taken off this list to identify and eliminate their sanctuary policies.”
Nearly a month after Trump took office, L.A. City Council unanimously voted to declare the city that is home to about 1,35 million immigrants a sanctuary jurisdiction and block any city resources from being utilized for immigration enforcement.
This story will be updated.
Source link