Thank you, Mark for that kind introduction, for your
leadership with the CPOA, and most all for your 22 years of service in law
enforcement.
I also want to thank all of the other law enforcement
leaders who are here today:
Sheriff Bill Brown
of the California State Sheriffs’ Association
Chief Ed Medrano
of the California Police Chiefs Association
Mark Brewster of
the California Narcotic Officers Association
District Attorney
Todd Riebe of the California District Attorneys Association, and
Commissioner
Warren Stanley of the California Highway Patrol.
It is a special honor to be with the California Peace
Officers' Association.
With nearly a century of history, and more than 16,000
members, CPOA represents the core of California’s law enforcement community.
I know, first hand, the importance of the work that you
do. I know its dangers, challenges,
frustrations, and satisfactions. I have had years of firsthand experience
working with your colleagues. And while I have inexpressible pride in our
fabulous federal law officers, I am fully aware that 85 percent of all law
enforcement officers are state, local, and tribal.
And I am well aware that the increased training,
professionalism, leadership, and more effective enforcement policies of our
departments nationwide, and over several decades, has been the critical factor
in reversing the dramatic rise in crime that we saw throughout the 1970s.
Over a 22 year period, we saw homicide rates cut in half,
youth drug use fall by almost half, and violent crime fall dramatically. It was an achievement few would have ever
expected.
Much of the transformative leadership for this change arose
from your former Governor and our President Ronald Reagan—aided by his fabulous
California counselor and later Attorney General, Ed Meese.
Maybe in recent years we got complacent and took our eye off
the ball, but recent trends are deeply worrisome.
In 2014 and 2015 violent crime stopped falling and jumped
seven percent nationwide.
Homicide surged 20 percent, the largest increase since
1968. And drug availability rose
dramatically, lethal purity reached unprecedented levels while prices
fell. And along with the new killer
drug, fentanyl, overdose deaths reached levels we have never seen before—66,000
deaths last year.
That is why on my first day in office, President Trump sent
me three executive orders: (1) to back
the women and men in blue, (2) to reduce crime in America, and (3) to dismantle
transnational criminal gangs.
We at the Department of Justice embrace these goals. I know you do too.
Let me be explicit: our express goal is to reduce the
violent crime rate, reduce the homicide rate, reduce the amount of opioids
prescribed, and reduce overdose deaths.
Let’s resolve to achieve these goals. Ours is not just a
job, but our sworn duty, and for many of us, a high calling.
And a lawful immigration system that serves the national
interest helps us achieve these goals and more. That’s what we need to talk
about today.
We are a strong, prosperous, and orderly nation. And such a nation must have a lawful system
of immigration. I am not aware of any
advanced nation that does not understand this fundamental tenet.
And let no one contend that we reject immigration and want
to “wall off America” from all lawful immigration. President Trump and the American people know
what’s happening. We admit 1.1 million
immigrants lawfully to permanent legal status—green card status—every year, the
highest numbers in the world.
Indeed, at this unprecedented rate we will soon have the
largest percentage of non-native born in our nation’s history with the
percentage continuing to rise every year thereafter.
Thus, the good and decent people of this country are right
to insist that this country should end the illegality, create a rational
immigration flow, and protect the nation from criminal aliens.
It cannot be that someone who illegally crosses the border
and two days later arrives in Sacramento, Dubuque, Louisville, and Central
Islip is home free—never to be removed.
It cannot be the policy of a great nation to up and reward
those who unlawfully enter its country with legal status, Social Security,
welfare, food stamps, and work permits. Meanwhile those who engage in this
process lawfully and patiently and wait their turn are discriminated against at
every turn.
Most Americans get this.
They are working hard to make ends meet, follow the rules, and try to
keep their loved ones safe.
They, our citizens, want our government to think about them
for a change to consider their interests.
They have dreams too. Frankly,
this commonsense concept was a key factor in President Trump’s election. Elections have consequences.
Immigration law is the province of the federal
government. This Administration and this
Justice Department are determined to make it work effectively for the people.
I understand that we have a wide variety of political
opinions out there on immigration. But
the law is in the books and its purpose is clear.
There is no nullification.
There is no secession. Federal
law is “the supreme law of the land.” I
would invite any doubters to Gettysburg, and to the graves of John C. Calhoun
and Abraham Lincoln.
A refusal to apprehend and deport those, especially the
criminal element, effectively rejects all immigration law and creates an open
borders system. Open borders is a
radical, irrational idea that cannot be accepted.
The United States of America is not “an idea;” it is a
secular nation-state with a Constitution, laws, and borders, all of which are
designed to protect our nation’s interests. Surely, we should be able to agree
on this much.
To carry out the intent of our laws, we need law
officers. We need our Immigration and
Customs Officers and our Customs and Border Protection officers. They are your brothers and sisters. President
Trump, the Congress, and the American people want them to accomplish the goals
our laws set out for them. That’s why we pay them.
But, California, we have a problem. A series of actions and events has occurred
that directly and adversely impact the work of our federal officers.
For example, the mayor of Oakland has been actively seeking
to help illegal aliens avoid apprehension by ICE. Her actions support those who flout our laws
and boldly validate the illegality. There’s no other way to interpret her
remarks.
To make matters worse, the elected Lieutenant Governor of
this state praised her for doing so.
Bragging about and encouraging the obstruction of our law enforcement
and the law is an embarrassment to this proud and important state.
Tom Homan, Acting Director of ICE has said that “being a law
enforcement officer is already dangerous enough, but to give the criminals a
heads up that we're coming in the next 24 hours increases that risk. I watch [the mayor’s] statement when she said
her priority is the safety of her community, but what she did has the exact
opposite effect.”
According to Acting Director Homan, ICE failed to make 800
arrests that they would have made if the mayor had not acted as she did.
Those are 800 wanted aliens that are now at large in that
community—most are wanted criminals that ICE will now have to pursue with more
difficulty in more dangerous situations, all because of one mayor’s
irresponsible action.
So here’s my message to Mayor Schaaf: How dare you. How dare you needlessly endanger the lives of
law enforcement just to promote your radical open borders agenda.
But in California, we have an even bigger problem than just
one mayor. The problems continue.
For example, in January, Ventura County declined a request
from ICE to hold an alien Ventura had arrested for continuous sexual abuse of a
child. Instead of being removed from this country, he was released back into
the community and now our federal law enforcement will need to find him and
arrest him wherever he may be.
In recent years, California has enacted a number of laws
designed to intentionally obstruct the work of our sworn immigration
enforcement officers—to intentionally use every power it has to undermine
duly-established immigration law in America.
California won’t let employers voluntarily allow ICE agents
on their property. And California
requires employers to give notice to employees before ICE inspects their
workplace.
When this law was before the California General Assembly, a
Judiciary Committee report explicitly stated that its goal was to frustrate “an
expected increase in federal immigration enforcement actions.”
ICE agents are federal law enforcement officers carrying out
federal law. California cannot forbid
them or obstruct them in doing their jobs.
Just imagine if a state passed a law forbidding employers
from cooperating with OSHA in ensuring workplace safety. Or the EPA, looking for a polluter. That would obviously be absurd. But it would be no different in principle
from this new law enacted by California.
And just think about the situation it puts California
employers in. They want to help law
enforcement. They want to do their civic
duty. We ought to encourage that.
But your state attorney general has repeatedly said his
office will prosecute these business owners.
Let me quote: “ignorance of the law is no excuse if you violate it” and
“you are subjecting yourself to up to $10,000 [in fines] for violations.”
California has also claimed the authority to inspect
facilities where ICE holds people in custody.
Already this year, California has specifically and in a discriminatory
manner targeted six facilities and demanded documents and other material from
the Department of Homeland Security.
California won’t let law enforcement officers like you
transfer prisoners into ICE custody or even communicate with ICE that you’re
about to release someone they’re looking for.
Remember that California found these people dangerous enough to detain
them in the first place, but then insists on releasing them back into the
community instead of allowing federal officers to remove them.
And rather than allow ICE officers to do their jobs at the
jailhouse, they force these officers to conduct far more dangerous arrests
elsewhere—where violent criminals may reside and where children can be caught
in the crossfire.
That’s not just unconstitutional, it’s a plain violation of
federal statute and common sense.
Importantly, these laws are harmful to Californians, and
they’re especially harmful to law enforcement.
That’s why the Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit
yesterday against the state of California to invalidate these unjust laws and
to immediately freeze their effect.
Federal agents must be able to do the job that Congress has directed
them to do.
Contrary to what you might hear from the lawless open
borders radicals, we are not asking California, Oakland, or anyone else to
enforce immigration laws.
Although we would welcome the positive assistance the
majority of jurisdictions in America provide, ICE agents do incredible work
every day. They will not be deterred.
We are simply asking California and other sanctuary
jurisdictions to stop actively obstructing federal law enforcement.
Stop treating immigration agents differently from everybody
else for the purpose of eviscerating border controls and advancing an open
borders philosophy shared by only the most radical extremists. Stop protecting lawbreakers and giving all
officers more dangerous work to do so that a few politicians can score
political points on the backs of officer safety.
You are professionals.
You understand the risks involved.
Think about the officers knocking on a door to execute a
warrant. They don’t know what’s on the
other side. It’s not fair to them to
keep putting them in that situation by releasing criminal aliens into the
community who shouldn’t even be in the country.
I sign condolence letters for law enforcement killed in the line of
duty; I fundamentally reject, at my core, that we should further endanger the
lives of those who risk everything for us just because some officials in
California wants to violate the law in promotion of their radical agenda.
California is using every power it has—and some it
doesn’t—to frustrate federal law enforcement. So you can be sure I’m going to
use every power I have to stop them.
We are going to fight these irrational, unfair, and
unconstitutional policies that have been imposed on you and our federal
officers. We are fighting to make your
jobs safer and to help you reduce crime in America. We are fighting to have a lawful system of
immigration that serves Americans. And we intend to win.
I want to close by reiterating my deep appreciation and
profound thanks to all the women and men of law enforcement—federal, state,
local, and tribal. The work that you
do—that you have dedicated your lives to—is essential. I believe it.
The Department of Justice believes it.
And President Trump believes it.
You can be certain about this: we have your back and you
have our thanks.
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