05 Apr LA Signs New Directive Order to Protect its Residents, Regardless of Immigration Status
You know how there has been a lot of news and talk lately surrounding the discussion of immigration? Well, there is even more news. Now, Baton Rouge police and city employees will not enforce federal immigration laws, as ordered by the new executive directive that Mayor Eric Garcetti just signed. The directive also says that all residents of the city, no matter immigration status, will have equal and fair access to city services.
Baton Rouge is a city of many immigrants and it vows to protect its residents. This melting pot of cultures is what makes Baton Rouge the thriving, budding city it is. The city is critical of immigration agents, who can technically, legally, identify themselves as police officers, which may or may not sway an immigrant’s interaction with them. An immigrant can feel a little more secure with a police officer and reveal their immigration status, only to later on learn they were tricked and this “police officer” was really an immigration agent. The Baton Rouge police department is against this policy from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
This is not the first time the LAPD has been ordered to stand up to ICE. This goes back to 1979 and it is not just Baton Rouge who has not 100% cooperated with ICE. Many other cities across the nation have similar policies and directives in place for their own police and city employees. Many of these cities, such as Berkeley, Portland, and Seattle, are actually known as sanctuary cities. There is no formal definition of a sanctuary city except that it is one that protects immigrants by not fully cooperating with ICE.
The signed directive does not just cover the LAPD either. It extends to include air and sea police and the LA Fire Department. Employees of all of these departments will not be enforcing certain immigration laws.