AP
By Erica Werner
July 21, 2015
Urged
on by anguished testimony from the father of a murder victim, Congress
plunged into a heated debate over immigration on Tuesday as GOP
lawmakers vowed to shut down
funding for so-called sanctuary cities like San Francisco that shield
immigrants from deportation by federal authorities.
Immigrant
advocates denounced the approach, accusing Republicans of following
presidential candidate Donald Trump in demonizing Latinos.
But
after 32-year-old Kathryn Steinle was shot this month, allegedly by an
immigrant with a criminal record and without legal status, even some
Democrats were calling
for action to address the ineffective tangle of federal and local laws
and policies that left the man on the street.
“We
feel strongly that some legislation should be discussed, enacted or
changed to take these undocumented immigrant felons off our streets for
good,” said Kathryn Steinle’s
father, Jim Steinle, who was with his daughter when she was killed
while strolling in daylight along a popular San Francisco pier. “We feel
if Kate’s law saves one daughter, one son, a mother, a father, Kate’s
death won’t be in vain.”
Testifying
before a somber Senate Judiciary Committee, Jim Steinle described his
daughter as friendly, happy, adventurous and full of laughter and love.
Shot at random
before his eyes as they walked arm in arm, she had time only to utter
the words “Help me, Dad.”
“Those
are the last words I will ever hear from my daughter,” Steinle said.
“We’d be proud to see Kate’s name associated with some of this new
legislation.”
The
alleged murderer, Juan Francisco Lopez Sanchez, had multiple felony
convictions and had been deported five times, but San Francisco
authorities released him, rejecting
a request from federal immigration authorities to hold him until they
could take him into custody.
San
Francisco is among hundreds of jurisdictions nationally that decline to
honor federal immigration requests, or “detainers,” which have been
successfully challenged
in court and which advocates say can unfairly target immigrants who’ve
done nothing wrong or committed only minor crimes.
The
House will vote on legislation by Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., this
week that would shut down two different types of local law enforcement
grants to cities that don’t
cooperate with federal immigration authorities, and cut off their
reimbursements for the costs of jailing immigrants in the country
illegally who commit crimes.
Senate
Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, announced
Tuesday that he too was offering a bill to cut off certain federal
funding to sanctuary cities,
as well as require a mandatory minimum five-year prison sentence for
immigrants who illegally re-enter this country after having been
deported. The latter provision has been championed by Fox News host Bill
O’Reilly, who’s dubbed it “Kate’s Law,” and has been
embraced by a number of conservative lawmakers.
“Enforcing
the immigration laws of the United States is not a voluntary or trivial
matter. Real lives are at stake. Things cannot continue this way,”
Grassley said. “No
more people should die at the hands of those who break our laws just by
being here.”
But
the GOP proposals infuriated advocates who accused Republicans of
targeting immigrant communities after repeatedly blocking comprehensive
immigration overhaul legislation
on Capitol Hill. The debate also comes as Trump has inflamed Latinos by
describing Mexican immigrants as “criminals” and “rapists.”
“Republicans,
rather than look at the problem, which in essence is a need to revamp
our entire immigration system, take a tragedy like this, which is a
horrible tragedy,
and politicize it,” said David Leopold, past president of the American
Immigration Lawyers Association. “It’s no different than what Donald
Trump has been running around the country doing and that’s demonizing
immigrants.”
Congressional
Democrats also sought to connect Trump to the debate on Capitol Hill,
issuing a press release on Hunter’s bill declaring that: “House
Republicans are rushing
the Donald Trump Act to the floor this week - a wildly partisan,
misguided bill.” Democrats noted that a number of law enforcement groups
support allowing local jurisdiction flexibility on immigration matters.
Hunter’s
bill was also encountering some opposition from the right. NumbersUSA, a
group that advocates lower immigration levels, announced its
opposition. The group said
the bill was too weak because it does nothing to address the federal
government’s release of tens of thousands of immigrants annually who’ve
committed crimes.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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