With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
We asked all 58 California sheriffs about immigration enforcement under Trump. Here’s what they said
(
Illustration by Gabriel Hongsdusit, CalMatters
)
President Donald Trump’s campaign pledge to ramp up immigration enforcement could put California’s 58 elected sheriffs in the hot seat because of their responsibility to manage local jails. CalMatters surveyed all of California’s sheriff’s about how they plan to navigate the complexities in local, state and federal immigration laws. Here’s what they told us.
During the previous Trump administration, then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed a so-called sanctuary law that limits how local enforcement agencies interact with federal immigration officers. At the time, several sheriffs from inland counties criticized the law and embraced Trump’s immigration policies.
Trending on LAist
-
In 2015, the first Taco Bell was moved with great fanfare from its OG location in Downey to the fast food chain's corporate HQ in Irvine. Ten years later, it's still there — murmurs of possible renovation and relocation notwithstanding.
-
There are at least 63,000 students with disabilities in the Los Angeles Unified School District, and many may be exempted from the district’s restrictive cellphone policy.
-
As you're driving around L.A. this week and next, plan to pull over and pull out your camera: the mountains all around us are about to be on display.
-
Friends of Big Bear Valley, the nonprofit that manages the popular YouTube livestream of the nest, confirmed the news Saturday.
-
The Los Angeles Unified school board voted Tuesday on a three-year school calendar that maintains longer breaks.
-
The limited edition bag, which sold out at its $2.99 price point, is sweeping a new kind of Asian America.
Best of LAist