This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom 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
-
The vibrant neighborhood crams 700 restaurants into a roughly two-mile radius, while many workers cram themselves into overcrowded apartments.
-
It's not just any hedge. It's the one that appeared in the 1978 classic horror film, "Halloween."
-
Two amateur bakers take on a beloved, almost sacrosanct school treasure.
-
For the first time in 17 years, the Dodgers did not win a single postseason game — and fans unleashed the memes.
-
An Orange County public defender has tallied 57 tainted criminal cases stemming from the county's informant scandal. New revelations of alleged misconduct could affect dozens more.
-
Dennis Block runs what he calls a 'leading eviction law firm.' A judge said legal citations submitted in Block's name for a case were fake. Experts told LAist the errors likely stemmed from AI misuse.
Best of LAist