Posted by
Adam Cassandra on Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:21:49 PM
When Anthony, Matthew and Michael Bologna were gunned down
last week in San Francisco by Edwin Ramos, a
21-year-old illegal immigrant from El Salvador,
the Bologna
family took little comfort in knowing that this tragedy could have been avoided
had Ramos been deported the last time he committed a crime. Ramos was convicted twice on felony charges
as a juvenile, but never faced deportation.
Danielle Bologna, whose husband and children were murdered, and her
brother Frank Kennedy have blamed
the city of San Francisco’s sanctuary policy toward illegal immigrants for
the loss of their family members.
Sanctuary cities fail to comply with federal law and ignore
constitutional principles to shield criminals from justice. Unfortunately cities across the United States
have adopted such measures, and it is doubtful that the next president will do
anything to stop these unconstitutional policies.
Sanctuary cities act on a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy
which keeps local law enforcement from asking about the legal status of
criminals they apprehend. Sanctuary
policies also prohibit local law enforcement from notifying federal Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) about illegals in their custody.
"Any mayor, any board of supervisors that passes these
laws should be prosecuted to the fullest," Kennedy said in an interview
about the death of his nephews and brother-in-law. "This is not the United States of San
Francisco . . . My family was the sacrificial lamb in this."
Not only do sanctuary cities refuse to comply with long
standing federal law, the 9/11 Commission Report also called on local law
enforcement to work more closely with federal agencies to enforce immigration
law. The report states, “There is a
growing role for state and local law enforcement agencies [for the enforcement
of immigration law]. They need more training and work with federal agencies so
that they can cooperate more effectively with those federal authorities in
identifying terrorist suspects.”
Last
year after a series of raids by federal authorities in California to arrest foreign nationals, San
Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom remarked, “I will not allow any of my department
heads or anyone associated with this city to cooperate in any way shape or form
with these raids,” adding, “We are a sanctuary city, make no mistake about it.”
The MO for San
Francisco officials has been to escort juvenile
illegals back to their home countries or place them in unsecured halfway houses
instead of allowing federal authorities to deport them. This summer, several criminal illegals escaped
from Newsom’s sanctuary houses in San
Bernardino County
and other regions.
Last August the nation saw how dangerous these sanctuary
policies are when three
college students were killed by illegal aliens with criminal records in Newark, NJ. Newark,
another sanctuary city, failed to deport the ringleader of the killings who had
been indicted twice for felonies in 2007, including the rape of a
kindergarten-aged girl.
This month in Virginia,
officials in Prince
William County
have decided to take the proper actions to make sure criminal illegal aliens
are identified. A new policy
requires the police to check the immigration status of every single person they
arrest by running their information through a national database to check their
citizenship status. Prince William
County's Board of County
Supervisors unanimously passed the immigration crackdown last fall. County officials began getting tough on
immigration last year by allowing police officers to ask suspects about their
immigration status before arrests were made.
WorldNetDaily
reports that crime in Prince William County
is down 19.3 percent in the first quarter of 2008, while crime has risen 22
percent in next door Fairfax
County.
An editorial
in the Washington Post last week
said that Prince William County’s
immigration policy had intentions to “hound, harass and humiliate illegal
immigrants.” The editorial also
commented that, “Across the nation, Prince William (County) has become
synonymous with an ugly strain of nativist intolerance that has deep roots in
American history but which is a slander on the county's generally well-educated
and diverse population.”
As I have pointed out before (Assimilate
Or Evacuate, “The
Race” And The Candidates) the United States has never had open
immigration, and for good reason. The
Framers wanted a unified American citizenry, with similar American customs, who
understood the purpose and operation of American government. Our Founding Fathers made clear that the laws
of America,
and the rights afforded to its citizens, were meant only to govern legal
American citizens:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more
perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the
common defence [sic], promote the
general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and
establish this Constitution for the
United States of America. [Emphasis added]
People who come to the United States illegally do not
respect our laws, and are criminals who have declared war on our way of
life. Every law enforcement division in
the nation should follow the lead of Prince
William County,
Virginia in
protecting the American people from blatant criminals. The “don’t ask, don’t tell” practices of
sanctuary cities must come to an end to protect American lives and ensure the
rule of law.
Cities and counties with
sanctuary policies:
Anchorage, Alaska
Fairbanks, Alaska
Chandler, Ariz.
Fresno, Calif.
Los Angeles
San Diego
San Francisco
Sonoma County, Calif.
Cicero, Ill.
Evanston, Ill.
Portland, Maine
Baltimore
Takoma Park, Md.
Cambridge, Mass.
Orleans, Mass.
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Detroit
Minneapolis
Albuquerque, N.M.
Aztec, N.M.
Rio Arriba County, N.M.
Sante Fe, N.M.
New York
Durham, N.C.
Ashland, Ore.
Gaston, Ore.
Marion County,
Ore.
Austin, Texas
Houston
Katy, Texas
Seattle
Madison, Wis.
Source: 'Enforcing Immigration Law:
The Role of State and Local Law Enforcement,' Congressional Research Service,
last updated Aug. 14, 2006