Thursday, July 13, 2023

THE BLACK LIVES MATTER HOAX - Black Lives Matter Movement Marks 10-Year Anniversary with ‘Defund the Police Week of Action’

 

Black Lives Matter Movement Marks 10-Year Anniversary with ‘Defund the Police Week of Action’

Demonstrators raise their fists as a fire burns in the street after clashes with law enforcement near the Seattle Police Departments East Precinct shortly after midnight on June 8, 2020 in Seattle, Washington. Earlier in the evening, a suspect drove into the crowd of protesters and shot one person, which …
David Ryder/Getty Images

(AP) The Black Lives Matter movement hits a milestone on Thursday, marking 10 years since its 2013 founding in response to the acquittal of the man who fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Gunned down in a Florida gated community where his father lived in 2012, Martin was one of the earliest symbols of a movement that now wields influence in politics, law enforcement and broader conversations about racial progress in and outside the U.S.

BLM activists and organizations plan to mark a decade of the movement with in-person and virtual events. Calls to action include a renewed push to defund police departments and reinvest in Black communities that have suffered disproportionately from police brutality, unequal treatment in criminal justice systems and mass incarceration.

In the wake of Supreme Court decisions that stymied relief from student loan debt held disproportionately by Black borrowers and banned affirmative action in higher education, the need for BLM’s existence couldn’t be more clear, said prominent movement activist Melina Abdullah.

“What this movement moment means is that we have to absolutely redouble our efforts and redouble our commitment to making Black lives matter,” said Abdullah, who is a director of BLM Grassroots Inc, a collective of organizers across the country.

“Ten years in, we’re getting a glimpse at what would happen if there were no Black Lives Matter,” she said. “We’re not just going to fight when it’s popular, but we’re going to fight because we need to fight.”

In Los Angeles on Saturday, the “#BLMTurns10 People’s Justice Festival” will be held in Leimert Park, a historic neighborhood and cultural hub for Black Los Angelenos. The festival is designed to feel like a village and will include a pop-up garden dedicated to families of people killed by police and white supremacist violence.

Festival organizers have invited Sybrina Fulton, Martin’s mother, to speak. Scholar and activist Dr. Cornel West, who is running for U.S. president as a third-party candidate in 2024, has been invited to give the festival’s keynote address.

The BLM movement first emerged in 2013, after the acquittal of George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer of mixed white and Hispanic heritage who killed Martin a year earlier. Zimmerman claimed to authorities that he acted in self-defense when he shot Martin. He also acknowledged to an emergency dispatcher that he had followed and profiled the Black teen as a potential burglar in the Sanford, Florida, gated community.

Martin’s encounter with Zimmerman, as well as the delay in arresting and charging the gunman in the killing, raised questions about how police handle suspected acts of vigilantism against Black victims. In 2012, former President Barack Obama, the nation’s first Black commander-in-chief, underscored public concerns over fairness in the case when he said: “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.”

On July 13, 2013, a Florida jury of six women, all but one of them white, found Zimmerman not guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter. The immediate response to the verdict reverberated in Florida and across the U.S., energizing a new generation of Black racial justice groups including the Dream Defenders and BYP100.

BLM co-founders Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Ayo Tometi — the three activists are credited with using the phrase as an affirmation and an organizing strategy — initially pledged to build a decentralized organization governed by the consensus. The August 2014 shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown at the hands of police in Ferguson, Missouri, helped the phrase “Black lives matter” become a potent rallying cry for progressives and a favorite target of derision for law enforcement unions and political conservatives.

But just three years into its existence, all but one of the founders remained involved in the movement’s burgeoning organization. And in 2020, an unprecedented wave of donations to the movement following protests over George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police meant that BLM needed more infrastructure.

Amid disputes with grassroots activists about the direction of the movement organization, the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation Inc. has been steward over a charitable endowment worth tens of millions of dollars. BLM Grassroots Inc. operates separately.

The foundation is marking the 10-year BLM anniversary with the launch of the campaign it’s calling Defund the Police Week of Action. On Monday, it released a digital ad renewing 2020 rallying cries for defunding police departments. The organization is also encouraging supporters to ask local and national elected officials to introduce a draft proclamation that establishes July 13 as “Black Lives Matter Day.”

“As we continue our push to defund the police, invest in Black communities and reimagine safety in our communities, we need our elected officials to focus on the people, not police,” BLM foundation board member D’Zhane Parker said in a statement.

“The safest places around the world don’t have more police, more jails, more prisons, or harsher sentences,” she said. “They have better access to economic opportunities, quality education, stable housing, and health care.”

Report: ‘Dangerous’ NYC Migrant Shelters Filled with Gang Members

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 6:Hundreds of asylum seekers line up outside of the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building on June 6, 2023 in New York City. New York City has provided sanctuary to over 46,000 asylum seekers since 2013, when the city passed a law prohibiting city agencies …
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images

New York City’s migrant shelters are plagued with “volatile” and “dangerous” conditions, prompting a search by city officials to hire private security guards for the facilities, a report details.

Since the spring of last year, more than 84,000 border crossers and illegal aliens have arrived in New York City with about 50,000 remaining in shelters across the city, now outnumbering native New Yorkers.

Gregory Floyd with Teamsters Local 237 told the New York Post that the migrant shelters are too dangerous for the unarmed peace officers he represents. Some, Floyd said, are gang members.

“There are migrants who are gang members in these facilities,” Floyd told the Post.

“It’s volatile. It’s dangerous,” he continued. “We don’t know if all these migrants are properly vetted. My members are unarmed.”

As Breitbart News reported, more than six-in-ten border crossers and illegal aliens who have arrived in New York City since the spring of last year are living off local taxpayers in subsidized housing and shelters — including luxury hotels like the Roosevelt Hotel.

The sheer volume of border crossers and illegal aliens staying in shelters has increased the system’s population by more than 110 percent since Adams took office. To afford subsidizing new arrivals, Adams has said New Yorkers will see public services like meals for senior citizens and library hours cut.

Every day, illegal immigration is costing New Yorkers nearly $8 million, and by the middle of next year, Mayor Eric Adams predicts it will have cost more than $4.2 billion.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here


Eric Adams Blames Media for New Yorkers' Worries About Crime

New York City mayor Eric Adams (D.) / Getty Images
July 12, 2023

New York City mayor Eric Adams (D.) downplayed residents' fears about crime in the city, blaming the media for its coverage.

"They start their day picking up the news, the morning papers … and they see some of the most horrific events that may happen throughout the previous day," Adams told Fox 5 New York on Wednesday. He added that the coverage "plays on your psyche."

Adams was responding to a Siena College poll that found 41 percent of New York State residents have never felt as concerned about their safety as they do now. The vast majority, 87 percent, said crime is a very or somewhat serious problem in the city and state.

"We know it’s going to take time," Adams said. "But if you lead off every day with some of the horrific incidents that take place in the city with 8.5 million people, there’s a feeling that you have."

Even Alvin Bragg, the city's progressive district attorney, admitted this week he is fearful of crime on the subway. "I know the statistics that transit crime is down, but when one of my family members gets on the train, I, too, get a knot in my stomach," he said.

Amid the crime worries, the New York Police Department is struggling. A report from March showed New York City police officers are resigning in record numbers. The NYPD at the same time lowered its fitness requirements to bring more women on the force.

Adams caught negative press last week when the New York Times reported that he lied about a photograph of a fallen police officer. Adams has frequently shown the photo and says he has kept it with him for decades in his wallet. In reality, his office printed the photo from Google and altered it to make it appear faded.

Adams isn't the only official under fire. City Council digital press aide Ember Ollom was called out by the city's police union after a tweet from 2020 resurfaced. "I would like it on the record that I would like you all to throw more bottles at cops and torch more vans," Ollom said in the May 2020 tweet, the New York Post reported. The call for violence against police came amid the George Floyd riots.

Published under: Eric Adams

The disgruntled patient who shot and killed a top hand surgeon in the exam room in Memphis yesterday after threatening him for a week has been identified as Larry Pickens. 

Pickens, 29, shot and killed Dr. Benjamin Mauck at the Campbell Clinic in Collierville, Memphis, at 2pm. 

It remains unclear what the shooter's motive was. Until yesterday, he had no criminal record. 

Collierville Police Department is refusing to discuss the details of the shooting, citing the ongoing criminal investigation. 

Pickens is being held on a $1.2million bond and will appear in court tomorrow. He was arrested outside the clinic yesterday after fleeing with his pistol. His last known address is around 10 miles from the clinic. 

Larry Pickens, 29, has been named as the suspect who shot surgeon Benjamin Mauck

Larry Pickens, 29, has been named as the suspect who shot surgeon Benjamin Mauck 

Surgeon Benjamin Mauck with his wife Rhiannon. The pair shared two young children

Surgeon Benjamin Mauck with his wife Rhiannon. The pair shared two young children 

Police inside the Campbell Clinic, hunting the gunman who was later found outside the building

Police inside the Campbell Clinic, hunting the gunman who was later found outside the building 

Police search for suspect after deadly shooting at Campbell Clinic
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Dr Mauck, 43, was remembered as a phenomenal doctor. 

Many of his patients, who lauded him as 'kind, funny, and smart,' said he saved their lives with his vital work. 

He leaves behind a wife and two young children.  

Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Benjamin Mauck was killed in his examination room at the Campbell Clinic in Collierville

Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Benjamin Mauck was killed in his examination room at the Campbell Clinic in Collierville

Collierville Police Chief Dale Lane said: 'It's bad. It's horrific. It's terrible.

'So, this appears to be a one-on-one interaction that occurred within an exam room. This was not a mass shooting situation.'

In an update, the police department wrote: 'The suspect in this incident is in custody as we continue to investigate.

'This was a single shooting, not an active shooting incident.'

'Tragedies like this underscore the urgent need for common sense – like reinstating background checks and gun licenses, and establishing new reforms like an order of protection so police can remove firearms from a person who is threatening others,' Akbari said in a statement.

'Whether you’re at school, a grocery store or on the job, you deserve to live and work free from gun violence.' 

Dr Mauck leaves behind his wife, Rhiannon Mauck, and their two young children. 

Just five days ago, Dr Mauck was heralded in the Memphis Magazine and by the national medical group Castle Connolly as one of the city's top doctors in a gushing feature. 

Patients hold their hands up as police search the Campbell Clinic for the gunman on Tuesday

Patients hold their hands up as police search the Campbell Clinic for the gunman on Tuesday 

The beloved doctor leaves behind his wife, Rhiannon Mauck, and their two young children

Mauck leaves behind a wife and two young children  

The hand surgeon with his wife, Rhiannon Mauck

The hand surgeon with his wife, Rhiannon Mauck

Officers rushed to the scene and found the suspect on Poplar Avenue near the entrance of the clinic with a gun. The shooter was taken into custody

Officers rushed to the scene and found the suspect on Poplar Avenue near the entrance of the clinic with a gun. The shooter was taken into custody

Dr Mauck told the magazine just last month: 'It's never boring.

'This work involves treating sports injuries, trauma, cancer, and soft-tissue defects. It's a field of orthopedics that crosses over into other specialties like plastic surgery and neurology.' 

He warned before the Fourth of July: 'Keep your kids away from fireworks.'

He worked as a hand surgeon at Campbell Clinic Orthopedics and was also the head of the Congenital Hand Clinic at Le Bonheur Children's Hospital. According to the clinic's website, Mauck specialized in elbow, hand, and wrist surgery.

Dr Mauck graduated from Lambuth University in 2002, before attending med school at the University of Tennessee-Memphis. He then completed his residency at UT-Campbell Clinic.

Irina Ollar, director of marketing and PR at Campbell Clinic, said in a statement: 'Earlier today, we experienced a single shooter event inside our Collierville clinic.

'We are shocked and heartbroken to confirm the incident resulted in the tragic loss of one of our highly respected and beloved physicians, Dr. Ben Mauck. We ask that you please lift his family in prayer.

'During this difficult time, we will be working through many details and will keep you updated as we are able.

Collierville Police Chief Dale Lane said: 'It's bad. It's horrific. It's terrible'

Collierville Police Chief Dale Lane said: 'It's bad. It's horrific. It's terrible'

'We have decided to close all Campbell Clinic locations tomorrow, July 12 and will communicate the reopening of all facilities at a later time.

'We appreciate our local law enforcement officers who responded within minutes. We will continue to work closely with authorities as this remains an active investigation.

'Our priorities remain Faith, Family and Patient Care. At this time, we ask for your prayers for the entire Campbell Clinic family, as well as for the privacy of Dr. Mauck's family.'

Dr. Trey Eubanks, interim president, surgeon-in-chief at Le Bonheur Children's Hospital, said: 'We were shocked to learn that Campbell Clinic and Le Bonheur surgeon Ben Mauck tragically was killed today at his clinic in Collierville.

'Ben was a friend to so many of us – a respected member of our Le Bonheur family, a beloved colleague and a dedicated physician to so many patients.

'We already miss him.

'His death is an unthinkable tragedy, and I am at loss at what to say. I am so sorry to those who loved and knew him, for those who worked alongside him every day.

'I am also grateful to this team, all of you. And I encourage each of you to be gentle with each other during this time. Ask for support and offer it when needed. We will all be affected by this loss in some way.

Just five days ago, Dr Mauck was heralded in the Memphis Magazine and by the national medical group Castle Connolly as one of the city's top doctors in a gushing feature

Just five days ago, Dr Mauck was heralded in the Memphis Magazine and by the national medical group Castle Connolly as one of the city's top doctors in a gushing feature

Dr Mauck is pictured with his younger sister, Amanda Mauck, who posted a touching picture to celebrate her brother's birthday two years ago

Dr Mauck is pictured with his younger sister, Amanda Mauck, who posted a touching picture to celebrate her brother's birthday two years ago 

'We will schedule debriefings and offering spiritual care and EAP sessions.

'Please keep the entire Campbell Clinic family and especially Ben's family in your thoughts and prayers.'

All Campbell Clinic locations will remain closed.

Dozens of tributes to the stellar doctor flooded social media on Tuesday.

Kristina Austin, who studied at school with the doctor, wrote: 'Everyday we are bombarded with senseless loss of lives, then one day it's someone you know, someone that you grew up with, cheered for on the basketball court, sat at a lunch table with in the cafeteria, stood next to in the commencement line, graduated with. 

'Someone who was always a genuinely kind person. Someone who spent years studying medicine to become a surgeon & help others. Today that someone was Ben Mauck.

'Only 5 days ago he was featured as a top doctor spotlight in Memphis Magazine, little could anyone imagine how quickly things would change.

'The ridiculousness of the tragedies we endure as a society now will always be beyond our comprehension because there is no reason for them. There was no reason for Ben Mauck to lose his life today. 

'Enough has got to be enough. It is my greatest prayer that our world regains some sort of moral compass. 

'It is my prayer tonight though that Mrs. Ann Mauck, the family and all those touched by Ben will be comforted by God's unfailing love. 

'We will never understand why, and our hearts definitely ache, but we can take comfort knowing that Ben is in the arms of the greatest physician tonight.'

Pamela Griffin, one of Mauck's patients, said: 'I am saddened by this news. I broke my fingertip in October and Dr. Benjamin Mauck performed my surgery on my hand. 

'I've been visiting him every six weeks. He was really trying to help me gain full motion back in my right ring finger. 

'I would've been seeing him next Tuesday in Collierville. He was a gentle giant with a very humble spirit. Prayers go out to your family and your assistant Ms. Candice. Rest in Love .'

Jackie Kelley, whose family were also treated by the doctor, added: 'So senseless and sad. He was such a nice person and a phenomenal surgeon. He did my husband's hand twice.'

His former colleague Calissa Kneip said: 'Oh my goodness, I used to work with Dr Mauck all the time for 8 years. This is so horrifying. He was shot & killed by a disgruntled patient in an exam room today. I'm in complete shock. 

'We loved you, Dr Mauck, and you helped so many people. RIP and prayers for his precious young family & my Campbell Clinic family.'

Josh Jacobs, who said that Dr Mauck saved his life by performing his amputation, wrote online: 'Praying for Dr. Benjamin Mauck's friends, family, and coworkers. Wishing them all peace.

'He was the hand surgeon who found my cancer and performed my amputation. I give him partial credit for possibly saving my life.

'The work he did for me was amazing. This is very sad news to hear.'

Mauck's former patient Tori Petrus Eads wrote: 'I'm heartbroken that Dr. Benjamin Mauck was killed today! He has been my doctor for years. He was kind, smart, funny and a great teacher. 

'He always used me to teach his residents how to inject joints. We joked that the only thing more painful was listening to me talk the whole time. Pray for him and his family.'

Marcie Taylor Stewart also remembered the doctor: 'Dr. Benjamin Mauck…the sweetest, most thorough hand specialist around. Thank you for saving my husband's hand and his ability to practice dentistry. 

'Thank you for giving him hope with his Dupuytrens syndrome in his hands. What a loss your gifts as an orthopedic surgeon will be. What a loss to the hands that need your care. 

'Prayers for your family, friends, patients and all that love you. The loss of this wonderful man and medical professional is just senseless!!! 

'Thank you for treating your patients so well Dr. Mauck. You will be missed. Shame on the person that took you from this world, your family and your profession that blessed so many.' 


Six Men Arrested for Robbing a Man in His Driveway in Texas

Jakaleb Lee Washington, 19, Kavion Deshawn Butler, 17, Davion Deshawn Butler, 17, Reginald Eugene Harris, 21, Deandrick Jefferson-Stewart, 19, Jamarcus Devon Wilmore, 20.
Houston Police Department

Four adults and two teenagers were arrested in Houston, Texas, after following a man home and robbing him in his driveway.

The six men followed Cipriano Cazares Sandoval home after he finished cashing a check at a business for his daughter living in Mexico, ABC 13 reported.

Surveillance footage shows Sandova’s truck blocked in his driveway, as two of the men approached him pointing guns.

RELATED VIDEO — COWARDLY: Suspect STEALS WALLET from Elderly Man in Houston, Texas:

Houston Police Department / BODY CAMS+ /TMX
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Police have called this jugging, meaning when a “suspect follows a victim from a bank to their next location,” according to the Austin Police Department.

Police said more than $1.3 million was stolen from jugging in just Austin, Texas, last year, CBS Austin reported.

RELATED VIDEO — Three Suspects Pull Handguns to Rob Houston Convenience Store:

Houston Police Department / BODY CAMS+ /TMX
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Sandoval, who does not speak English, said the two suspects took his phone. Another two suspects got out of the car and surrounded Sandoval’s truck, and he noticed two more were still in the vehicle.. He said he memorized the car’s license plate and made notes of the suspects’ appearances.

Within an hour of reporting the incident, authorities tracked down the vehicle and suspects.

Sandoval said he was grateful he wasn’t injured as suspects had two guns pointed at his stomach.

The six men facing charges are Jakaleb Lee Washington, 19, Kavion Deshawn Butler, 17, Davion Deshawn Butler, 17, Reginald Eugene Harris, 21, Deandrick Jefferson-Stewart, 19, and Jamarcus Devon Wilmore, 20.

 

NYPD Searching for Attacker Who Hit Man in Head with Baseball Bat in Broad Daylight

Suspect Struck Man with Baseball Bat
Twitter/@NYPDnews

The New York Police Department (NYPD) is searching for an attacker who randomly struck a man in the head with a baseball bat multiple times in broad daylight, the department announced on Tuesday.

The attack occurred on Thursday around 2:50 p.m., according to authorities. The 37-year-old victim was walking at Aqueduct Avenue and West 183rd Street in the Bronx when the attacker approached him, pulled out a bat, and repeatedly struck him in the head. 

The assailant immediately fled the scene and is still on the loose as of Tuesday.

NYPD put out a wanted notice for the attacker and urged residents to “ DM @NYPDTips, or call 800-577-TIPS” if they have any info on the attack.

The victim “sustained a laceration to his head, as well as bruising,” according to law enforcement. He was rushed to a local hospital where he remains in serious but stable condition.

Jordan Dixon-Hamilton is a reporter for Breitbart News. Write to him at jdixonhamilton@breitbart.com or follow him on Twitter.


President Joe Biden, his administration, and the corporate media tried their best over the last two and a half years to downplay the record number of illegal border crossings, but a majority of Americans aren’t buying into the lie that the ongoing border crisis is improving....

A new poll from Pew Research found that 73 percent of Americans think the Biden administration is doing a bad job at handling the U.S.-Mexico border. MONICA SHOWALTER

 VIDEO

CUT AND PASTE YOUTUBE LINKS

Watters: I guarantee you Satan went to law school

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6Ln2aXLqWw

 

GAMING THE LAWS LIKE HE GAMES THE BORDER: JOE BIDEN AT WORK!

Still Subsidizing Sanctuaries

DOJ sends millions to jurisdictions that undermine federal law and public safety

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By Jessica M. Vaughan and Nathan Desautels on July 13, 2023

Listen to the accomapanying podcast here.


Jessica Vaughan is the director of policy studies and Nathan Desautels is an intern at the Center for Immigration Studies. 


In 2021, the Department of Justice gave out approximately $300 million to sanctuary jurisdictions under three funding programs — the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP), the Byrne Justice Assistance Grants (JAG), and the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) program. The awards to sanctuaries represented more than 40 percent of the available funding under these programs. Sanctuary jurisdictions are receiving this funding despite having adopted policies to hinder cooperation between local law enforcement agencies and federal immigration authorities. As a result, the federal government is subsidizing agencies that may be violating federal law and undermining public safety.

Key Findings:

  • Nearly $300 million was awarded to sanctuary jurisdictions in 2021, representing 43 percent of all of the funding awarded in the SCAAP, Byrne JAG, and COPS funding programs.
  • Eleven sanctuary state agencies and 86 localities that have sanctuary policies or are located within sanctuary states received funding in 2021.
  • State agencies in California, which has one of the most egregious state sanctuary laws, received $82 million in DOJ grants — not counting tens of millions in additional funding for individual cities and counties in the state.
  • Among localities, the biggest recipients were Chicago, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C.
  • The majority of SCAAP and Byrne JAG program funding went to sanctuary jurisdictions in 2021; 58 percent of the SCAAP funding and 68 percent of the Byrne JAG funding went to sanctuaries, while 28 percent of the COPS funding went to sanctuaries.

The Center for Immigration Studies has identified nearly 300 states and localities that have adopted sanctuary policies.1 These cities, counties, and states have laws, ordinances, regulations, resolutions, policies, or other practices that obstruct immigration enforcement and shield criminals from ICE — either by refusing to or prohibiting agencies from complying with ICE detainers, imposing unreasonable conditions on detainer acceptance, denying ICE access to interview incarcerated aliens, or otherwise impeding communication or information exchanges between their personnel and federal immigration officers.

Certain of these policies have been found to be a violation of federal law (8 USC 1373 and 1644), which says that no state or local government may prohibit or in any way restrict local officials from communicating with federal immigration authorities about a person’s immigration status.2

Our analysis examines three DOJ grant programs: the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP), the Edward M. Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne JAG), and the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS). The purpose of SCAAP is to reimburse state and local prisons and jails for a portion of the cost of incarcerating illegal aliens who were held on state and local charges.3 The Byrne JAG program is the leading source of federal justice funding that goes directly to state and local jurisdictions for a range of activities, including prosecution and law enforcement.4 The COPS grant program provides funding for community policing efforts in localities around the country.5

These DOJ programs are among the largest sources of federal funding for state and local law enforcement agencies. Longstanding eligibility rules require that recipients must be in compliance with all federal laws. Beginning in 2016, congressional appropriators and Justice Department officials stipulated that this included the provisions in federal law that prohibit certain sanctuary policies, and took steps to block certain jurisdictions from receiving funds under these programs.6 Several jurisdictions moved to change their policies, including Miami-Dade County in Florida, and others refused to change, but were blocked from certain DOJ funding programs. A series of lawsuits ensued, with varying outcomes, resulting in an attempted appeal to the Supreme Court, which dismissed the cases as moot7 after the incoming Biden administration rescinded the rules barring sanctuaries.8

This report examines the distribution of SCAAP, Byrne JAG, and COPS funding to sanctuary jurisdictions in 2021, which are presented in Table 1. The award amounts and total available funds are compiled from publicly available award announcements on the Justice Department web site.9

Table: Department of Justice Funding of Sanctuary Jurisdictions, 2021

Table: Top 10 Sanctuary Localities for DOJ Funding

  • SCAAP awards are granted to both state and county corrections agencies. In sanctuary states, both state and county totals are compiled. Those counties that have sanctuary policies above and beyond the state policy are itemized to show their totals, while all other counties within a sanctuary state are compiled under “All Other Localities”. In states that do not have state-wide sanctuary policies, only the unique sanctuary counties’ awards are itemized.
  • Byrne JAG grants are disclosed according to state allocations, which are then distributed within the state. Only sanctuary state totals are itemized here, as local allocations could not be readily determined.
  • COPS grants are awarded to municipal, county, tribal, and state entities, as well as to a few non-governmental organizations. Only state, county, and municipal grants were counted. Awards to unique local sanctuary jurisdictions and also municipalities within sanctuary states were counted, as were certain municipalities that are tied to county sanctuary policies.

Nearly $300 million went to sanctuary jurisdictions in 2021 from these three federal law enforcement grants alone. This total represents a substantial level of federal grant funding going toward jurisdictions that refuse to cooperate with or deliberately hinder federal immigration enforcement. Considering that nearly all of the federal immigration enforcement within the country is directed at removing aliens who have committed crimes, and who are quite likely to re-offend if allowed to remain in the community, the sanctuary policies undeniably are undermining public safety and undercutting the effectiveness of the DOJ programs from which they receive funding. According to one government report, about 25 percent of criminal alien offenders who were released by sanctuary jurisdictions were subsequently arrested again within eight months of release.10

Sanctuary policies tend to attract illegal migration and provide a haven for illegal aliens involved in crime. Several drug dealers interviewed for a recent San Francisco Chronicle investigative story on the involvement of illegal aliens from Honduras in the city’s drug trade confirmed as much, telling the reporters that Honduran illegal migrants flock to the city in large part because they know that the city’s sanctuary policies will help them avoid deportation: “The reason is because, in San Francisco, it’s like you’re here in Honduras. The law, because they don’t deport, that’s the problem. ... Many look for San Francisco because it’s a sanctuary city. You go to jail and you come out.”11

Now, instead of requiring awardees to demonstrate that they are in compliance with the federal law on sanctuary policies, DOJ has begun requiring recipient agencies to provide information on their adherence to certain Biden administration policing policy preferences. For instance, to receive a Byrne JAG grant, since January 2022 law enforcement agency applicants must complete a questionnaire seeking attestations on matters such as the agencies’ use of force policies, “policies and/or procedures that incorporate best practices on officer hiring, recruitment, and retention to include diversity, equity, and inclusion”, and efforts to address racial, ethnic, gender, and LGBTQIA bias.12

While it may not be possible for the federal government to compel state and local governments to cooperate with federal immigration authorities, it is reasonable for the federal government to try to discourage sanctuary policies and penalize jurisdictions that choose to obstruct such a legitimate and vital federal activity. The limits on a president’s authority to do so have yet to be fully defined in the courts, but in the meantime Congress certainly has the authority to impose conditions on federal funding programs that could block access for sanctuary jurisdictions. In addition, the existence of sanctuary policies should be recognized by the federal government, citizens, and other stakeholders as a potential risk factor on the same level as other governance considerations, for example when issuing bond credit ratings or other assessments of a state or local government’s stability. Finally, state governments can take action to penalize or prohibit local sanctuary policies, as Texas, Florida, and eight other states have done.


End Notes

1 Jessica M. Vaughan and Bryan Griffith, “Sanctuary Cities, Counties and States”, Center for Immigration Studies, updated June 9, 2023.

2 8 U.S. Code § 1373 - Communication between government agencies and the Immigration and Naturalization Service.

3 ”State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP)”, Bureau of Justice Assistance, updated April 22, 2021.

4 ”Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) Program”, Bureau of Justice Assistance, updated June 30, 2023.

5 ”About the COPS Office”, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, DOJ, undated.

6 See Jessica M. Vaughan, “House Appropriations Boss Initiates Crackdown on Sanctuaries”, Center for Immigration Studies, February 1, 2016; Jessica M. Vaughan, “Justice Department Agrees To End Subsidies for Sanctuaries”, Center for Immigration Studies, February 25, 2016; and Jessica M. Vaughan, “AG Sessions Set to Block Millions in Funding to Sanctuaries”, Center for Immigration Studies, July 27, 2017.

7 Lawrence Hurley, “U.S. Supreme Court dismisses ‘sanctuary’ funding dispute”, Reuters, March 5, 2021.

8 “Legal Notices”, U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, April 22, 2021.

9 For SCAAP: “BJA FY 2021 State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) Award Details”, Bureau of Justice Assistance, DOJ, undated; For Byrne JAG: “Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) Program, 2021”, Bureau of Justice Assistance, DOJ, June 2022; For COPS: “Community Policing Development (CPD) Program”, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, DOJ.

10 “Declined Detainer Outcome Report”, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, October 8, 2014, published in Jessica M. Vaughan, “Rejecting Detainers, Endangering Communities”, Center for Immigration Studies, July 13, 2015.

11 Megan Cassidy and Gabrielle Lurie, “This is the hometown of San Francisco’s Drug Dealers”, San Francisco Chronicle, July 10, 2023.

12 “Accountability Performance Measures Questionnaire”, Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance, revised December 2021.


HALF THE POPULATION OF MEXIFORNIA WAS BORN IN MEXICO. THE DEMS' AMNESTY WILL ENABLE THEM TO BRING UP THE REST OF MEXICO AND VOTE DEM FOR MORE!

California Democrats Block Bill to Make Child Trafficking a Felony

Child trafficking (Getty)
Getty

A Democrat-run committee of the California State Assembly blocked a bill Tuesday that would have made trafficking a minor a “serious felony.” The Republican bill had already passed the State Senate unanimously.

Shannon Grove (R-Bakersfield) introduced the bill, SB 14, which also notes that California leads the nation in reported cases of human trafficking of minors. The inclusion of trafficking a minor as a “serious felony” would make that crime ineligible for plea bargaining in most circumstances and would require that the crime be included under the state’s 1990s-era “Three Strikes” law, allowing for life imprisonment after three felonies.

However, Grove noted Tuesday, the Public Safety Committee, led by Assemblyman Reggie Jones-Sawyer (D-South Los Angeles), declined to advance the bill.

Jones-Sawyer is also the author of a bill that would allow judges to use criminal sentencing to “rectify racial bias” in the criminal justice system.

In a statement, Grove said:

After passing the Senate with a unanimous, bipartisan vote, I had hoped Democrats on the Assembly Public Safety Committee, led by Assemblyman Reggie Jones-Sawyer, would agree to make sex trafficking of a minor a serious felony. I am profoundly disappointed that committee Democrats couldn’t bring themselves to support the bill, with their stubborn and misguided objection to any penalty increase regardless of how heinous the crime.

Human trafficking of children is a growing tragedy that disproportionately targets minority girls, and California is a hotbed because of our lenient penalties. The sad reality is that trafficked children on Figueroa Street and across California will continue to be raped and victimized until Assembly Democrats take action. Since the bill was granted reconsideration, I will continue to work with the committee and fight for Californians who are outraged by their decision.

SB 14 was voted down in the Assembly Public Safety Committee with 6 Democrats abstaining and 2 Republicans voting aye. The measure was also granted reconsideration.

The bill is eligible for reconsideration, which means it could still pass.

The scourge of human trafficking is dramatized in the surprise independent box office hit Sound of Freedom, which has drawn audiences across the nation, surpassing recent mainstream Hollywood studio releases.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News and the host of Breitbart News Sunday on Sirius XM Patriot on Sunday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT). He is the author of the recent e-book, Neither Free nor Fair: The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election. His recent book, RED NOVEMBER, tells the story of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary from a conservative perspective. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.


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