9/11 Anniversary Inspires California Legislature to Approve Bill Shielding Criminal Aliens from Deportation!
(September 11, 2013 — Washington, D.C.) — The California legislature yesterday fast tracked Assembly Bill AB 4, the so-called Trust Act, which now heads to Governor Jerry Brown. If signed, the bill would impede the federal government’s ability to enforce immigration law, decrease public safety, heighten national security risks and create further lawlessness in a state heavily burdened by illegal immigration.
AB 4 prohibits state and local law enforcement from honoring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainers unless the arrested illegal alien has been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor that is punishable as a felony — and even in that instance, the bill grants local law enforcement the discretion to ignore the detainer. If California enacts legislation that orders local law enforcement agencies to ignore ICE detainers, state and local jails will have no choice but to release these criminals — criminals who have no right to be in the United States — back onto the street.
“AB 4 would abolish any last vestige of immigration enforcement in a state already reeling from years of sanctuary policies, lax enforcement and expanding benefits for 3.2 million illegal aliens,” charged Dan Stein, President of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR). “AB 4 is a dangerous and irresponsible bill, and there is no reason — none — that could ever justify Governor Brown allowing it to become law. Signing it may represent the point of no return for the rule of law in California and set a precedent for other states.”
AB 4 — like its predecessor AB 1081, which the Governor vetoed last year — blatantly thwarts federal intent by choking off cooperation between state law enforcement and ICE. In 2012, former ICE Director John Morton stated his opposition to the anti-detainer legislation. In a letter to FAIR, Morton warned that jurisdictions that ignore ICE detainer requests undermine public safety in their communities, noting that his agency has documented serious crimes committed by deportable aliens who have been released rather than handed over to ICE.
“On this 12th anniversary of 9/11, the lessons of lax immigration enforcement and its catastrophic consequences appear utterly lost on the California legislature,” Stein continued. “While all illegal aliens are obviously not terrorists, many terrorists apprehended on U.S. soil have, in one form or the other, breached our immigration laws. AB 4 would increase the risk that dangerous criminals and potential terrorists are released back onto the street if they were arrested for minor offenses.”
FAIR urges Governor Brown to veto the legislation.