A coalition of 18 states filed a court brief on Monday to support the Trump administration’s lawsuit against California’s sanctuary laws.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions sued California earlier this month, charging that its sanctuary policies are unconstitutional because they prohibit California state employees and officials from cooperating with federal authorities.
To support the lawsuit, attorneys general from states including Texas, Florida, Michigan, and Georgia filed a friend-of-the-court brief which points to legal arguments invalidating the California statutes and argues that neighboring states can be hurt by the influx of illegal immigrants from a sanctuary state.
On the day after the attorneys general filed their brief, California’s Orange County defied its state sanctuary laws by voting to support the lawsuit as well. The Orange County Board of Supervisors voted in a closed-door session on Tuesday to join the Trump administration’s legal battle against California’s sanctuary laws.
Last week, Los Alamitos, a small city in Orange County, was the first to vote to oppose California’s sanctuary laws. Since then, several other Orange County cities have signaled that they are considering similar actions. The Orange County Sheriff’s Office also defied state law by publicly posting the dates that inmates would be released from custody.
The most common way sanctuary locales obstruct the work of federal immigration authorities is by refusing to honor requests by immigration enforcement officers to detain inmates after their release.
Sessions called such policies a “radical, irrational idea that cannot be accepted,” and that state laws cannot supersede federal statutes.