In April 2017, a federal district court issued a nationwide preliminary injunction preventing the Trump administration from enforcing the sanctuary jurisdictions portion of the "Enhancing Public Safety in the Interior of the United States" executive order (EO). The Department of Justice (DOJ) asked the court to reconsider its ruling in light of a May memo from Attorney General Jeff Sessions interpreting the EO narrowly. The court refused. 

Per the EO, so-called sanctuary jurisdictions are afraid the federal government is going to take away all federal grant funding if, among other things, they do not comply with warrantless, voluntary U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainers, which instruct jails to detain undocumented persons after they may be otherwise free to go so that ICE may pick up and deport them. 

The Sessions memo says that the executive order only applies to DOJ or Department of Homeland Security (DHS) grants and that the term “sanctuary jurisdiction” only refers to jurisdictions that “willfully refuse to comply with 8 U.S.C. 1373.” Section 1373 is narrow; it only prohibits local governments from restricting employee communication of immigration status information to ICE. In its motion to reconsider, DOJ explicitly confirmed that it is not interpreting Section 1373 to require compliance with ICE detainer requests. 

When litigating this case before the Sessions memo came out, DOJ tried to convince the court that it interpreted the EO as the Sessions memo would later describe; however, the judge concluded that the “interpretation was not legally plausible in light of the order’s plain language and the government’s many statements indicating the Order’s expansive scope.”

In trying to convince the court to reconsider its initial ruling that the sanctuary jurisdictions executive order is likely unconstitutional, DOJ claimed the memo is a material change in evidence because “it is formal guidance from the attorney general regarding the scope and meaning of the wxecutive order that binds DOJ and other federal agencies.”

The district court rejected the weight DOJ tried to place on the memo, concluding it is not likely a binding legal opinion. And even if it is, the court concluded it is not clearly binding on other executive agencies, including DHS and DOJ, and the attorney general himself. As the court noted, “[t]he AG Memorandum is directed only to grant-making components within DOJ, is labeled as an 'implementation' memorandum, is only two pages long, does not engage in substantive legal analysis, and primarily outlines plans to enforce the order, rather than an opinion on its meaning or scope.”

The result of the court’s decision, in this case, is that the EO is still currently unenforceable nationwide. What’s next in this litigation? DOJ will probably appeal to the Ninth Circuit. 

Topics

New, Reduced Membership Dues

A new, reduced dues rate is available for CAOs/ACAOs, along with additional discounts for those in smaller communities, has been implemented. Learn more and be sure to join or renew today!

LEARN MORE