San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors is set to vote Tuesday on an
ordinance tightening the city’s sanctuary city law. Introduced by
Supervisor John Avalos, the measure would prohibit local law enforcement
from responding, except in very limited cases, to requests from federal
immigration officials for an inmate’s personal information or release
date. Supporters say that the change is necessary following findings
earlier this year that police violated the sanctuary city law by
releasing San Francisco resident Pedro Figueroa-Zarceno to federal
immigration agents. Critics say that local agencies should have greater
latitude to cooperate with federal authorities. We discuss the proposed
legislation and how it might impact the city’s immigration policies.
Listen to the rest here.
Anger Without a Cause
17 hours ago
1 comment:
Why should a Liberal sewer like SF have its own "immigration policies" ?
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