Assist or
Resist: Local Officials Debate Trump’s Mass Deportation Threat
Communities
are divided on how much to cooperate with immigration agents. In San Diego, the
sheriff has vowed to defy a new policy protecting migrants.
By Tim
Arango and Hamed Aleaziz
Dec. 25,
2024, 5:01 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/25/us/trump-deportations-migrants-san-diego.html
The San
Diego region, like many communities that hug the southern border, saw a sharp
drop in migrants entering the United States after the Biden administration made
it harder to apply for asylum.
But
thousands of newcomers who had crossed the border haven’t been forgotten, and
even as many of them made their way to other corners of the country, some
remain in and around San Diego, still undocumented.
Now, with
President-elect Donald J. Trump pledging to carry out mass deportations,
leaders in San Diego have been weighing how far to go in trying to protect
people vulnerable to deportation and how much local law enforcement should
cooperate with federal agents.
Such
discussions are unfolding around the country after Mr. Trump won back the White
House promising to curb immigration and tighten up border security.
But few
places have been seeing the debate play out as dramatically as San Diego
County, which sits on California’s border with Mexico, and where for a few
weeks this year, the number of crossings was higher than in Texas and Arizona.
After Mr.
Trump’s victory, the Board of Supervisors for San Diego County moved to bolster
protections for migrants by requiring federal agents to obtain a judicial
warrant for any undocumented immigrants they want to pick up from a local jail,
banning any investigative interviews by immigration officials inside jails and
prohibiting the use of county resources for immigration enforcement.
But even in
a state with some of the strongest shields for undocumented immigrants, San
Diego County was ratcheting up the fight over immigration enforcement, and the
new protections drew swift and pointed criticism.
And it
wasn’t just the Trump administration’s designated border czar who denounced the
warrant mandate. San Diego’s own sheriff, who oversees the county jails, said
she wouldn’t enforce the requirement.
The pushback
by the county’s top law enforcement officer, who, like a majority of the county
supervisors, is a Democrat, underscored emerging tensions over immigration even
among officials who not long ago might have seemed more closely allied.
In what
appears to be another sign of the friction in San Diego, the chair of the Board
of Supervisors, Nora Vargas, said on Friday that she was stepping down, just
weeks after being re-elected. “Due to personal safety and security reasons, I
will not take the oath of office for a second term,” Ms. Vargas said on social
media.
The issue of
how much local jails cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement has
long been top of mind for federal officials. The cooperation, however, will be
key for the Trump administration’s efforts to increase deportations.
When an
immigrant is arrested and fingerprinted, the information is transmitted to ICE.
Once ICE learns that an immigrant is in custody, federal officials often send
requests — known as detainers — for the local jail to notify them well before
an immigrant is to be released, so federal agents can take them.
In four of
the last six fiscal years, ICE officials have issued more than 100,000 such
requests (the numbers plunged for two years during the pandemic). Through the
2018 and 2019 fiscal years, during the Trump administration, ICE sent out more
than 300,000 such requests.
Deportations
have been carried out under every modern president, and it was under Mr. Obama,
a Democrat, that the debate over so-called sanctuary cities really took off.
But it is
Mr. Trump’s pledge to carry out mass deportations that has plunged local
governments ever deeper into the debate over immigration enforcement, said
Ahilan Arulanantham, co-director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy
at the U.C.L.A. School of Law. “I think people feel the weight of it more
because most people think Trump can’t accomplish quote unquote mass deportation
without extensive cooperation with state and local governments.”
After the
election, Los Angeles passed a new ordinance prohibiting city resources from
being used for immigration enforcement. Yet elsewhere in the country, officials
are rethinking their arms-length relationships toward ICE.
In New York
City, Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, has repeatedly raised the possibly of
working more closely with ICE and altering the city’s sanctuary laws to make it
easier to detain migrants in jails on behalf of immigration agents. And in
Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, has proposed a budget that would
strip funding from local agencies that refuse to respond to ICE requests.
But the
clash in San Diego could make it a hot spot in the debate over local
cooperation with federal authorities. Thomas D. Homan, who has been named
“border czar” in the upcoming administration, told The New York Post that San
Diego’s new policy is “10 times worse” than California’s state sanctuary law.
Under San Diego’s new policy, federal agents would be required to obtain a
judicial warrant before jail officials could transfer someone to ICE custody or
hold someone beyond an inmate’s release date on behalf of federal officials.
In saying
she would not enforce San Diego’s new requirement, the county sheriff, Kelly
Martinez, said in a statement that, “While protecting the rights of
undocumented immigrants is crucial, it is equally important to ensure that
victims of crimes are not overlooked or neglected in the process.”
Ms. Martinez
said she does support the state law that limits cooperation with federal
immigration authorities. It allows for the transfer of prisoners being held in
connection with certain crimes from ICE once they are eligible for release.
Under the
Biden administration, the number of people transferred from San Diego jails to
ICE custody has declined sharply. Last year, 25 people were transferred to ICE
after serving time for crimes such as grand theft, murder and drug trafficking.
By comparison, in 2017 San Diego transferred 1,143 people, according to the
sheriff’s department.
It’s easier
and safer for ICE to arrest people at jails than on the streets, and the agency
can round up far more people that way than it can by arresting people in homes
and workplaces or on the street.
Corey Price,
a former senior ICE official, said it would become all but impossible to pick
up immigrants from local jails.
The amount
of time it would take to obtain warrants for each case “is untenable,” he said.
“The law is clear in that an immigration officer only needs an administrative
warrant” to arrest an undocumented immigrant.
Mr.
Arulanantham, the U.C.L.A. law professor, said requiring a judicial warrant is
consistent with due process and Fourth Amendment protections against
unreasonable search and seizure.
And in the
case of detainees whose sentences had been completed, a warrant would be the
only lawful way to hold them until ICE could pick them up, Professor
Arulanantham said. “I definitely think that a detainer or transfer of somebody
without a warrant after their sentence is over violates the Fourth Amendment.”
It is
unclear how the conflict between the sheriff and the Board of Supervisors will
play out. Local immigration advocates argue that the state’s law, known as the
California Values Act, requires law enforcement to also abide by local policies
on immigration.
In a letter
to the sheriff, Ian M. Seruelo, the chair of the San Diego Immigrant Rights
Consortium, said, “We hope that your statement was a mere misunderstanding on
your part of the full scope of the California Values Act, and not a flagrant
disregard for state law, our democratic processes and our constitutional
rights.”
In an
interview, Mr. Seruelo, who is also a practicing immigration lawyer, said that
any coordination between local law enforcement and immigration agents harms
public safety because it makes immigrants less likely to report crimes or
cooperate as witnesses. “A lot of families here in San Diego have an
undocumented member,” he said. “If that level of trust is diminished toward
local law enforcement, it will discourage many San Diegans from reporting crime
or from accessing county resources or services.”
The lone
dissenting vote on San Diego’s Board of Supervisors came from Jim Desmond, a
Republican, who said there already are protections for immigrants reporting
crimes or dealing with the local police, who are barred from asking about
immigration status.
“So we’re
talking about people that have already committed the crime, they’ve already
been tried for the crime and convicted and sentenced and they are in our
jails,” he said. “And so this has nothing to do with reporting, doesn’t put
anyone in jeopardy for reporting. All this does is allow our sheriffs to let
ICE know that these people are in our custody and when they are going to get
out.”
Tim Arango
is a correspondent covering national news. He is based in Los Angeles. More
about Tim Arango
Hamed
Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy. More
about Hamed Aleaziz
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