Monday, May 16, 2005

Sanctuary, illegal immigration, crime and public safety

Carol Platt Liebau:

Los Angeles' absurd "sanctuary policy," codified in Special Order 40, prohibits police officers from asking immigration questions. It is a threat to public safety. The next mayor, if he's smart, will push hard to change it.

Prompted by concerns that Salvadoran gangs have established beachheads in Los Angeles, Police Chief William J. Bratton has already proposed guidelines that would permit officers to contact their supervisors, who could check the immigration status of people they believe to be deported felons who have returned to L.A. illegally. Suspects would still enjoy due-process rights; they could be apprehended only with a warrant obtained after federal judicial review. In contrast, U.S. citizens are almost always subject to warrantless arrest.

Activists for illegal immigrants and civil libertarians contend that modifying Special Order 40 would make illegal immigrants reluctant to use city services and to report crimes. They fear that the police, under the pretext of checking immigration status, would use the new policy to harass Latinos generally. They also point to the Rampart scandal in the late 1990s, in which suspects were allegedly turned over to immigration officials by corrupt cops.

Protecting civil liberties is vitally important, but in this instance, it does not trump the need for more effective law enforcement against crimes increasingly committed by illegal immigrants. According to Heather MacDonald of the Manhattan Institute, 95% of the hundreds of outstanding homicide warrants (and 60% of outstanding felony warrants) in L.A. are for illegal immigrants. More than half of the city's homicides are gang-related. The National Youth Gang Center, a private group, estimates there are 100,000 gang members in L.A. County, and that illegal immigrants make up a substantial part of these gangs. Of the membership of the notorious 18th Street gang, estimated at 20,000, fully 60% are illegal aliens, according to a 1995 report by the state Department of Justice.

As many as 30,000 illegal immigrants with criminal records are in L.A. County. The Los Angeles Police Department arrests about 2,500 criminally convicted deportees annually. But because of the sanctuary policy, they are arrested only after they have committed other crimes. If officers had the power to arrest previously deported criminals for immigration violations, they could prevent future crimes.

L.A. Times Sunday Opinion Section is Excellent Today

No argument justifies amnesty for illegal aliens

L.A. Violence Crosses the Line

THE COST OF LAWLESSNESS

ROLL CALL: House votes to impose minimum sentences for street-gang crime

2 Comments:

At 4:57 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm no lawyer, but I still think a lawsuit by victims of crime committed by illegal aliens who've benefited from a sanctuary policy -- e.g. had prior contact with the police and were not detained/deported -- has got to have some merit.

 
At 3:43 PM, Anonymous Dominick said...

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