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Judicial Watch Petitions California Supreme Court to Review Taxpayer Challenge to LA Sanctuary Policy -- Seeks to Revive Part of Proposition 187
LAPD's Special Order 40 Sanctuary Policy Is a Dangerous and Unlawful "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" Illegal Immigration Sanctuary Policy
| Source: Judicial Watch
WASHINGTON, DC--(Marketwire - July 30, 2009) - Judicial Watch, the public interest group
that investigates and prosecutes government corruption, announced today
that it has filed a "Petition for Review" with the California Supreme Court
in its taxpayer lawsuit against Special Order 40, a Los Angeles Police
Department illegal alien sanctuary policy (Judicial Watch, Inc. v The Los
Angeles Police Department et. al, Case No. BC349040). Judicial Watch's
taxpayer lawsuit argues that Special Order 40 violates federal immigration
law as well as California State law. The California Court of Appeal ruled
on June 17, 2009 that the lawsuit could not proceed to trial.
Judicial Watch asked the California Supreme Court to review two specific
questions in its petition, filed on July 27.
First, Judicial Watch asked the California Supreme Court to settle the
important question of whether federal law preempts California Penal Code
834b, which states, in part, that "Every law enforcement agency in
California shall fully cooperate with the United States Immigration and
Naturalization Service (now Immigration and Customs Enforcement) regarding
any person who is arrested if he or she is suspected of being present in
the United States in violation of federal immigration law." The statute
also prohibits local government entities from limiting the cooperation
between local law enforcement officers and federal immigration officials.
The Court of Appeal failed to apply Penal Code 834b, finding that the
provision, approved by voters in 1994 as part of Proposition 187, was
preempted by federal law as "an impermissible regulation of immigration."
"It is ironic, to say the least, that a statute enacted by California
voters to promote cooperation and information sharing between state, local,
and federal law officials on immigration matters would be dismissed so
easily as an impermissible regulation of immigration when federal law so
obviously seeks to promote these very same goals," Judicial Watch states in
its petition. (The federal Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant
Responsibility Act of 1996 promotes the free flow of information between
state and local officials and federal immigration authorities.)
In fact, earlier this year, the California Supreme Court found that a
California statute allowing juveniles to be declared wards of the court
based on violations of federal immigration laws was not preempted by the
Supremacy Clause or any other federal law. The Court had recognized that
"a regime of cooperative federalism, in which local, state, and federal
governments may work together to ensure the achievement of federal criminal
immigration policy."
Second, Judicial Watch is challenging the appellate court's decision to
force a taxpayer challenging an administrative policy to satisfy the same
heavy burden as a person bringing a "facial" challenge to a statute or
ordinance. A "facial" challenge requires a litigant to prove that an
ordinance or statute is always and under all circumstances
unconstitutional. As Judicial Watch notes in its complaint, there is no
statute or ordinance at issue in this lawsuit.
"Special Order 40 and the even more restrictive, unwritten practices and
procedures by which the LAPD has implemented Special Order 40 most
definitely are not statutes, ordinances or legislative enactments,"
Judicial Watch noted in its complaint. Considering Judicial Watch's
taxpayer lawsuit as a "facial challenge" is inappropriate, therefore,
"because, by definition, a practice does not have a 'face.' This is
especially the case in legal challenges to unwritten practices such as
Plaintiff has asserted here. There simply is no text to be analyzed."
"Special Order 40 is a dangerous and unlawful 'don't ask, don't tell'
policy that puts law-abiding citizens at risk. There is no question
Special Order 40 frustrates the free flow of communication between law
enforcement officers and federal immigration officials. This is a clear
violation of federal immigration law," said Judicial Watch President Tom
Fitton. "We hope the California Supreme Court considers the serious legal
issues at the center of this taxpayer lawsuit."
For more information, visit www.judicialwatch.org/lapd-special-order-40.