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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

TRUST Act passed in CA state assembly!

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#1
08-25-2012, 01:59 AM
Senior Member
From San Francisco
Joined in Apr 2009
476 posts
plOp
0 AP
Hopefully Governor Brown signs it! A bill against ICE Secure Communities.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/0...n_1829125.html

Quote:
WASHINGTON -- A bill that would drastically reduce California's participation in a key immigration enforcement program passed through the state Assembly Friday and will now head to the desk of Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.

Under the bill, called the TRUST Act, California would no longer cooperate fully with Secure Communities, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement program meant to net criminals who are undocumented immigrants. Secure Communities hasn't worked as hoped by officials in California and elsewhere, and the California is trying to mitigate the negative effects of the program, including high costs and concerns that it prevents immigrants from coming forward to report crime.

The TRUST Act would mandate that California law enforcement offices ignore requests from ICE to hold immigrants they otherwise wouldn't. Secure Communities uses fingerprints taken upon arrest to find undocumented immigrants. When there is a match, ICE asks officers to hold the immigrant for two days -- but that often is extended.

A recent report based on data from the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department found immigrants were held based on ICE requests for about 20 days longer than was typical, at a cost of more than $26 million a year.

The TRUST Act passed through the Assembly in May, but came back for a final vote after it passed the Senate with some amendments. The Assembly approved it Friday in a 48 to 26 vote.

It's not yet clear, however, whether the bill will become law. Brown hasn't given any indication about his views on the matter, and his office declined to comment Friday since the legislation is not yet on his desk.

Other California Democrats are more vocal in their support of the TRUST Act. Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa repeatedly spoken out about the need for the bill, and told HuffPost in an interview earlier this month that he hoped the program would be reformed nationwide to match the bill's changes.

"When Secure Communities was first established, I thought it was established on those grounds" targeting felons, he said. "As time went on, we've taken the position that it hasn't been working the way it was proposed."

Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, who first introduced the TRUST Act, applauded the passage of the bill.

"This is a bill that speaks to humanity," he said in a statement. "It prevents unjust treatment of productive Californians, while allowing local law enforcement to continue to focus on dangerous criminals."
For anybody interested here's the video of the debate on the Assembly floor.
The video is here at time marker: 25:34: http://www.calchannel.com/2012-archive/.
Last edited by plOp; 08-25-2012 at 02:13 AM..
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#2
08-25-2012, 12:15 PM
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From New York State of Mind
Joined in Dec 2010
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GNIGHT's Avatar
GNIGHT
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Good job Cali.. NY and Cali seem like very safe states for dreamers.
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#3
08-25-2012, 03:50 PM
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dreamy14
240 AP
Yay California....total opposite of SB1070.
Hopefully other states follow. =)
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#4
08-25-2012, 04:33 PM
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Laker24x
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Illegal is illegal
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#5
08-25-2012, 07:46 PM
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Joined in Jul 2012
293 posts
cufnc
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Quote:
Sheriff Baca may defy proposed law easing immigration enforcement

By Cindy Chang, Los Angeles Times

August 25, 2012
Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca is among the California law enforcement officials who may defy a proposed state law and continue to detain arrestees who are illegal immigrants when asked to do so by federal authorities.

The Trust Act, which cleared the state Legislature on Friday, is the latest measure nationwide to push back against federal immigration policy, either by reducing or increasing enforcement. The law would prohibit local authorities from complying with federal detention requests except when a suspect has been charged with a serious or violent crime.

Sheriffs say that if the law is signed by Gov. Jerry Brown, it would put them in a difficult position by forcing them to renege on their obligations under the federal Secure Communities program, which deported about 400,000 undocumented immigrants in 2011.

"It would make me break either federal or state law. I would have to pick which one to break," Sonoma County Sheriff Steve Freitas said.

Brown, who supported Secure Communities when he was attorney general, has not indicated whether he will sign the Trust Act, a final version of which passed the Assembly on Friday on a 48-26 vote. Some sheriffs say they may end up disregarding the state law but are waiting to see what the governor will do. Baca has gone a step further, saying that he will respect detention requests from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement despite state requirements.

"Our stance is that federal law trumps state law. If it were to move forward, we'd adhere to federal law, so we'd still honor ICE holds,"
Baca spokesman Steve Whitmore said.

The Secure Communities program calls for local law enforcement to share fingerprint databases with ICE. That means someone booked on a minor offense, such as trespassing or disturbing the peace, could come to immigration authorities' attention. ICE could then issue a request for the local agency to hold the suspect for up to 48 hours.

The Trust Act would prohibit sheriffs and police departments from honoring those hold requests, possibly drawing the ire of federal authorities as well as California sheriffs.

ICE Director John Morton has said a similar measure in Cook County, Ill., violates federal law. He has threatened to take away the federal funding that Cook County receives to jail immigration detainees.

Critics say Secure Communities ensnares immigrants committing minor infractions, such as the Sacramento tamale vendor who recently became a cause celebre when she was arrested on trespassing charges as she hawked her wares in a Wal-Mart parking lot. The woman, Juana Reyes-Hernandez, spent several weeks in jail while her two children were put in foster care. Her deportation case was eventually dismissed.

"Even if she did violate some civil infractions, what was used against her was horrible: the threat of deportation. We want to distinguish between the tamale lady and those who have in fact committed egregious crimes," Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco), who authored the Trust Act, said on the Assembly floor Friday.

Fewer than a third of the roughly 80,000 people deported from California through Secure Communities since the state joined the program in 2009 were convicted of serious felonies. Most of the rest committed misdemeanors.

Critics of federal policies also cite the costs of keeping immigration detainees, an expenditure that is partially reimbursed by federal grants.

A study by the research group Justice Strategies concluded that ICE detainees stay at Los Angeles County jails an average of 20 days longer than other pre-trial inmates, costing as much as $26 million a year.

But some sheriffs said the cost is part of doing business.

"Does it cost us something? Yeah. But I don't find the costs prohibitive to effective and cooperative law enforcement," said San Diego County Sheriff William Gore, who may join Baca in defying the Trust Act if the governor signs it.

Divisions within California law enforcement highlight a national concern: In the absence of large-scale federal immigration reform, local jurisdictions are adopting divergent policies, leaving undocumented immigrants exposed to significantly different enforcement practices.

"This is one more fight between the federal government and local government because we continue to not solve the greater problem," said Wendy Sefsaf, communications director for the Immigration Policy Center.

Trust Act proponents hail the measure as a sharp turn from harsh policies in Arizona, which passed SB 1070, aimed at allowing local law enforcement to crack down on illegal immigration. The Supreme Court recently struck down major parts of the law.

If Brown signs the Trust Act, California would cement its reputation as one of the nation's more immigrant-friendly jurisdictions.

"California can lead the nation in preserving a community's well-being while leaving immigration duties to the federal government where they belong," said Jorge-Mario Cabrera, director of communications for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles. "We don't need to become an immigrant-chasing nuthouse."

But California sheriffs fear the law would put them at odds with the federal government.

"To do these types of things unwinds partnerships that have worked so well to protect the public," said Riverside County Sheriff Stan Sniff, who said he "wouldn't be surprised" if his department ends up defying the Trust Act.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,2399415.story
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Date Sent: 8/15/12 from Los Angeles County | Date Arrived: 8/16/12 at Phoenix Lockbox
Service Center: Nebraska | i-797C Receipt Received: 8/23/12 | Biometrics: 9/12/12
Approved: 9/28/12 | EAD Received: 10/4/12 | Applied for SSN: 10/5/12
Received SSN: 10/25/12| CA ID: 11/3/12 | CA DL: 11/8/12
Last edited by cufnc; 08-25-2012 at 07:55 PM..
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#6
08-26-2012, 04:14 AM
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Cris_32
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It's about the California love
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#7
08-26-2012, 04:35 AM
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From SoCal
Joined in Aug 2012
5,123 posts
g33k
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cris_32 View Post
It's about the California love
California... knows how to party California... knows how to party
In the citaaay of L.A.
In the citaaay of good ol' Watts
In the citaaay, the city of Compton
We keep it rockin! We keep it rockin!

»«does the Crip walk»«
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