Sunday, December 07, 2008

JAMIEL'S LAW

I am sure that all of you are aware of the controversy swirling around police policies concerning illegal immigrants which have left the country with many "sanctuary cities." Well, the residents of Los Angeles will get to vote on that issue if a voter initiative gets enough signatures to get on the ballot for the next city election. Here is the Los Angeles Times report on the initiative:

Los Angeles Times

SUPPORTERS OF JAMIEL'S LAW SAY THEY HAVE ENOUGH SIGNATURES TO GET MEASURE ON MAY BALLOT

The voter initiative would allow Los Angeles police to arrest illegal immigrant gang members solely because they're illegal.

By Phil Willon and Evelyn Larrubia
December 6, 2008

Supporters of a proposed Los Angeles voter initiative that would allow police to arrest illegal-immigrant gang members solely for being in the country illegally said they collected enough petition signatures before Friday's deadline to qualify the measure for the May ballot.

The signatures still need to be verified by the Los Angeles city clerk's office, a process that could take up to three weeks. Proponents, who needed to gather 73,963 signatures from valid registered voters in the city, said they had submitted more than 76,000.

Jamiel's Law, as it is known, is named after 17-year-old Los Angeles High School football player Jamiel Shaw II, who was gunned down in March allegedly by a reputed gang member who was in the country illegally. The measure would modify the Los Angeles Police Department's Special Order 40, which prohibits officers from initiating contact with individuals for the sole purpose of determining whether they are illegal immigrants.

Immigrant-rights advocates and LAPD Chief William J. Bratton strongly oppose Jamiel's Law, saying it is unnecessary and opens a backdoor to "racial profiling" by law enforcement. Bratton, when testifying before the City Council in April, said officers already have the authority to tell immigration authorities when known gang members have committed crimes.

Proponents dismiss critics as being more concerned with political correctness than public safety. They said the proposal is focused solely on gang members who have been documented as such by law enforcement agencies, and would allow them to be arrested, prosecuted and deported just for being illegal immigrants.

"The whole point of Jamiel's Law is that we shouldn't wait for the dead body. If you can't get a gang member for a crime -- and it's a crime to enter the country illegal -- get them for that," said the measure's author, mayoral candidate Walter Moore.

However, Father Richard Estrada, who does extensive work with immigrants and founded a shelter for young homeless men in Boyle Heights, said that any such measure would allow overzealous law enforcement officials to pull over male Latino drivers at will and would distract officers from the task of getting dangerous criminals off the streets.

"I hope they don't" get enough signatures," said Estrada, an associate pastor at the 189-year-old Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in downtown Los Angeles. "What are they going to do? Are they going to arrest all the immigrant kids who are gang members or look like it or are at the wrong place at the wrong time? We need officers to really go after the bad guys."

Supporters of Jamiel's Law had until 5 p.m. Friday to turn in petition signatures to the city clerk's office. City elections officials will count the signatures and conduct a sampling to determine if they are from valid registered voters who live within the city limits.

Jamiel Shaw's family has actively supported the measure, and was collecting signatures up until Friday's deadline.

"What makes me so sad is that we have to fight so hard just to report gang members who are in this country illegally," said Shaw's aunt, Althea Shaw, 47, of Los Angeles. "This is not about color. This is not about Latino versus black. It's about right and wrong, about life and death."

The alleged killer, Pedro Espinoza, awaits trial on a murder charge.

1 comment:

Carol said...

I love the quote from Estrada that the cops would go after people who are in or who look like they're in gangs instead going after the really bad guys.

You mean... like a murderer who is also an illegal alien and a gang member? If that's not a really bad guy, who the hell is??