
Trump administration increases pressure on ‘sanctuary jurisdictions' with public list
The Department of Homeland Security is putting more than 500 'sanctuary jurisdictions' across the country on notice that the Trump administration views them as obstructing immigration enforcement, as it attempts to increase pressure on communities it believes are standing in the way of the president's mass deportations agenda.
The department on Thursday published a list of the jurisdictions and said each one will receive formal notification that the government has deemed them noncompliant, and whether they're believed to be in violation of any federal criminal statutes. The list was published on the department's website.
'These sanctuary city politicians are endangering Americans and our law enforcement in order to protect violent criminal illegal aliens,' DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said in a news release.
The Trump administration has repeatedly targeted communities, states and jurisdictions that it says aren't doing enough to help Immigration and Customs Enforcement as it seeks to make good on President Donald Trump's campaign promises to remove millions of people in the country illegally.
The list was compiled using a number of factors, including whether the cities or localities identified themselves as sanctuary jurisdictions, how much they have complied already with federal officials enforcing immigration laws, if they had restrictions on sharing information with immigration enforcement or if they had any legal protections for people in the country illegally, according to the department.
Trump signed an executive order on April 28 requiring the secretary of Homeland Security and the attorney general to publish a list of states and local jurisdictions that they considered to be obstructing federal immigration laws. The list is to be regularly updated.
Federal departments and agencies, working with the Office of Management and Budget, would then be tasked with identifying federal grants or contracts with those states or local jurisdictions that the federal government identified as 'sanctuary jurisdictions' and suspending or terminating the money, according to the executive order.
If 'sanctuary jurisdictions' are notified and the Trump administration determines that they 'remain in defiance,' the attorney general and the secretary of Homeland Security are then empowered to pursue whatever 'legal remedies and enforcement measures' they consider necessary to make them comply.
There's no specific or legal definition of what constitutes a 'sanctuary jurisdiction.' The term is often used to refer to law enforcement agencies, states or communities that don't cooperate with immigration enforcement.
ICE enforces immigration laws nationwide, but the agency often seeks state and local help in alerting federal authorities of immigrants wanted for deportation and holding that person until federal officers take custody.
One way that the administration seeks to enlist state and local support is through 287(g) agreements with local law enforcement agencies. Those agreements allow local law enforcement agencies to assume some immigration enforcement duties and greatly expand ICE's capabilities. The number of those agreements has skyrocketed in just a matter of months under the Trump administration.
ICE has about 6,000 law enforcement officers – a number that has remained largely static for years – who are able to find, arrest and remove immigrants it's targeting. By relying on local law enforcement, it can quickly scale up the number of staff available to help carry out Trump's mass deportations agenda.
Communities that don't cooperate with ICE often say they do so because immigrants then feel safer coming forward if they're a witness to or victim of a crime. And they argue that immigration enforcement is a federal task, and they need to focus their limited dollars on fighting crime.
The Trump administration has already taken a number of steps targeting states and communities that don't cooperate with ICE – and has met pushback in the courts. One executive order issued by Trump directs the attorney general and Homeland Security secretary to withhold federal money from sanctuary jurisdictions. Another directs federal agencies to ensure that payments to state and local governments do not 'abet so-called 'sanctuary' policies that seek to shield illegal aliens from deportation.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
China's Power Prices Nosedive in Relief to Tariff-Hit Factories
(Bloomberg) -- A crash in Chinese coal prices, and a flood of clean energy, are cutting power rates in major industrial hubs, easing pressure on some of the factories caught in the crossfire of trade hostilities with the US. ICE Moves to DNA-Test Families Targeted for Deportation with New Contract The Global Struggle to Build Safer Cars At London's New Design Museum, Visitors Get Hands-On Access NYC Residents Want Safer Streets, Cheaper Housing, Survey Says The Buffalo Architect Fighting for Women in Design In Jiangsu province, the average price for June contracts settled by centralized bidding plunged 24% year-on-year to 313 yuan ($44) per megawatt-hour, the lowest level regulators allow. In Guangdong, the rate dropped 8.3% to the government's floor of 373 yuan per MWh. The two coastal powerhouses are heavily dependent on exports, with a combined economy bigger than that of France. The main driver is a collapse in the price of coal — down 30% over the past year — which accounts for more than half of the electricity generated in China. A shift to market-based pricing, particularly for renewables, is also helping to weaken rates. 'Generation costs are cracking,' said David Fishman, a Shanghai-based principal at consultancy The Lantau Group. 'Coal generators, when they're bidding into the system, they're able to entertain lower prices because all of the generation costs are lower.' Just as economic conditions worsen due to the trade war, Chinese industry is finding relief in the government's drive for energy security. That effort has been most successful in power markets. The country is sitting on a glut of coal that's built up over years and leads the world in its rollout of wind and solar. Lower power costs aren't universal though, because of the way the market is structured. The monthly contract declines apply to only about a quarter of electricity sales, Fishman estimated, with some 70% of transactions decided on a yearly basis. Spot or short-term trades account for the rest. Still, a lot of annual deals are at least partially tied to monthly or short-term pricing, which will have expanded the number of beneficiaries, Fishman said. 'I would be surprised if there were a lot of power buyers out there just seething, looking at the prices dropping, thinking how come I didn't see that?' he said. Policy Shifts Recent policy changes have also pressured electricity prices. The sharp drop in Jiangsu's monthly rate was largely due to the start-up of its spot market in June, said Nannan Kou, head of China research at BloombergNEF. Power generators were keen to lock in buyers ahead of the extra competition from spot traders, and lower coal prices allowed them to offer discounts while still eking out a profit, he said. Most regions in China are expected to have at least trial operations for spot markets, which rely on near instantaneous assessments of supply and demand, by the end of the year. Clean energy is a key pillar of China's embrace of market forces. Starting June 1, all renewables generators have to sell their power on the open market, although projects connected to the grid before that date will retain price protections that limit their downside. That creates the incentive to sell electricity without worrying too much about falling prices, said Lantau's Fishman, which could put more pressure on rates and deliver even lower costs to customers. On the Wire Automakers in the US and Europe raised concerns about China's export controls on rare earth metals, as Beijing's move threatens to disrupt global car production. Markets cheered in early May when the US and China agreed in Geneva to lower tariffs and other barriers. But after a few weeks, the shine started to come off that deal, with China accusing the US of violating it with new restrictions and the US saying China failed to honor promises on rare earths. The European Union's trade chief, Maros Sefcovic, said he raised industry-wide concerns over Chinese export restrictions on rare earths and magnets with his counterpart Wang Wentao on Tuesday. This Week's Diary (All times Beijing) Thursday, June 5: Caixin's China services & composite PMIs for May, 09:45 China's NEA and grid companies brief on building a modern power network at 10:00 in Beijing Chongqing Gas Exchange conference in Kunming, day 1 CSIA's weekly solar wafer price assessment Friday, June 6: Chongqing Gas Exchange conference in Kunming, day 2 China's weekly iron ore port stockpiles Shanghai exchange weekly commodities inventory, ~15:30 Saturday, June 7: China's foreign reserves for May, including gold Shanghai Platinum Week begins, runs through June 10 Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again YouTube Is Swallowing TV Whole, and It's Coming for the Sitcom Millions of Americans Are Obsessed With This Japanese Barbecue Sauce Is Elon Musk's Political Capital Spent? Trump Considers Deporting Migrants to Rwanda After the UK Decides Not To ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Washington Post
21 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Plans for nation's largest ICE detention center halted amid DOGE review
The federal government has paused a plan to issue a $47 million contract for an expanded immigrant detention center in Georgia amid a review of the contract by the U.S. DOGE Service, according to a local official briefed on the matter and documents obtained by The Washington Post. An official from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement informed local officials in Charlton County, Georgia, on Wednesday that the agency was unable to move forward with a plan to reopen a former prison as an immigrant detention facility, County Administrator Glenn Hull said in an interview. The county has scrapped plans to hold a vote on the contract that had been scheduled for Thursday evening. The sizable contract was flagged for review under a federal policy that requires all Department of Homeland Security contracts worth more than $20 million to be reviewed by DOGE, which stands for the Department of Government Efficiency, according to notes from a May 28 meeting of federal agency officials obtained by The Post. The scrutiny of DHS is relatively new for DOGE, the group formerly led by Elon Musk, which has made sweeping changes to the federal government resulting in billions of dollars in canceled contracts and the departure or dismissal of thousands of federal workers. The new detention contract would have created the largest immigrant detention center in the country and a potential hub for housing immigrants arrested throughout the southeast. It would have combined Folkston, an active ICE detention center that can hold up to 1,100 detainees, with D. Ray James, an idle former prison located on an adjacent property that can hold around 1,870 detainees, according to an agenda item posted on the county's website. 'This is a big blow to Charlton County,' Hull said of the paused proposal, which he said would have brought 400 additional jobs to the area. He said the deal is not canceled but would require a 'federal policy change' to resume. The plan's disruption by a DOGE contract review has not been previously reported. DOGE's action also deals a blow to Geo Group, ICE's largest contractor and owner of the Georgia facility. The firm has been expecting a dramatic expansion of its detention business under the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Tom Homan, the border czar at DHS, was previously paid consulting fees by Geo, according to an ethics disclosure first reported by The Post last week. A spokesman for Geo deferred questions to ICE. A spokeswoman for ICE could not immediately provide a comment. A White House spokeswoman has said that Homan abides by 'the highest ethical standards' and that he has previously told reporters he would recuse himself from discussions of government contracts. Homan has championed a dramatic expansion of the nation's immigrant detention system, which he says needs at least 100,000 beds to accommodate the large numbers of undocumented immigrants the administration plans to deport. ICE has 51,000 detained immigrants and 54,000 'usable beds' for them, according to notes from the meeting last month of federal officials involved with immigration enforcement. Advocates for immigrants have argued that more detention facilities are unnecessary and that the Trump administration is detaining people who pose no harm to the community or risk of absconding. Activists also have opposed plans to expand immigration detention in Georgia. Last year, the actions of Folkston's staff played a role in a 57-year-old detainee not promptly getting to the emergency room while he was having a heart attack, contributing to his death, according to the findings of an investigation by ICE's medical division. Earlier this year, the federal government awarded Geo contracts to reopen facilities in New Jersey for about $60 million a year and in Michigan for about $70 million a year. An agreement to expand detention at Geo facility in Texas is expected to be worth $23 million in annual revenue, the company said. Geo is also hoping to extend its lucrative contract for immigrant ankle monitoring services. On May 30, ICE filed a procurement notice stating that it intended to negotiate a one-year extension with BI Inc., a Geo subsidiary — an extension which could help Geo capitalize on a potential expansion in immigrant monitoring by President Donald Trump. Geo has told investors that it has the ability to grow the immigrant monitoring program to 'upwards of several millions of participants.' Such an expansion could balloon the value of the contract, currently worth about $250 million to $300 million annually, to more than $1 billion, said Joe Gomes, a financial analyst at Noble Capital Markets. It's unclear whether any of these contracts have been reviewed by DOGE. The DOGE team has strangled spending across the federal government since it swept into D.C. at the start of Trump's first administration — including by canceling thousands of contracts. An early target was the Education Department, where DOGE fed sensitive internal financial data into artificial intelligence software to help identify contracts to cut, The Post reported. Their plan was to replicate the process across government, ultimately eliminating every contract not essential to operations or required by law. DOGE has since nixed contracts at at least 22 agencies including the Department of Health and Human Services, the General Services Administration, and the Agriculture Department, according to the group's own online tracker. DOGE's work at Homeland Security has focused on boosting Trump's immigration priorities. In recent months, DOGE has sought to pool federal data across agencies to help the Trump administration identify and deport undocumented immigrants, The Post reported. DHS has been a crucial part of those DOGE-brokered efforts; for example, it asked the Social Security Administration for help with immigration enforcement and tracking down fraudulent use of Social Security numbers. DOGE also has worked with DHS staff to set up Trump's new visa program for wealthy immigrants, The Post reported. The Trump administration and ICE detention companies have said they expect to accelerate contracts for new detention centers when Congress makes more funding available for immigration enforcement. House Republicans last month approved a tax and spending package that included $59 billion for immigrant detention and transportation over five years — several times the current annual budget for detention. The legislation must still pass the Senate. Geo and its main rival, CoreCivic, together own at least 16 idle facilities that they have said they hope to reopen as immigrant detention centers, according to transcripts of analyst calls, investor filings and contract applications. Aaron Schaffer and Dan Keating contributed to this report.


CBS News
23 minutes ago
- CBS News
Saturday special session? Leaders in Minnesota Legislature hope to avoid layoff notices to thousands of state workers
Minnesota legislative leaders and Gov. Tim Walz hope there will be a special session of the Legislature this weekend before layoff notices will be sent to nearly 30,000 state workers on Monday. They had pushed for mid-week, but by Wednesday they said negotiators still hadn't buttoned up outstanding issues, causing further delays. Walz will call a special session when the bills are complete, drafted and ready for passage. Leaders and key lawmakers have been working on the remaining parts of the budget for weeks, largely out of public view. DFL Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman said Wednesday they are "urgently" trying to finish by the weekend to avoid sending state employees that dreaded message. But other self-imposed deadlines have come and gone since the regular session ended May 19 and lawmakers began their behind-the-scenes work to finish everything up. "We are making progress. It is as slow as molasses, but molasses is good, and we are going to get done. I cross my fingers," said Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-Saint Paul. This is the most closely divided Legislature in Minnesota history, which makes the process uniquely delicate and difficult to get everything done. It's unclearif there are even the votes to pass some parts of the carefully crafted agreement they made in late May. "We're at a point right now where, quite candidly, and the legislators know this—I'm not even saying as a pejorative—every single legislator is potentially a veto over the whole deal to get some of this done," Walz said. Among the sticking points are how they will pass a rollback of state health coverage for undocumented immigrants—a compromise reached by GOP and DFL leaders. There is also some contention with a transportation funding package and provisions in a tax bill. Many DFL lawmakers deeply oppose the cuts to MinnesotaCare for adults who are living in the country illegally. Murphy has said it needs to be a stand-alone bill to ensure passage, an acknowledgment of the many likely defectors she will have in her caucus, which only has a one-seat majority in the chamber. Republicans will need to support it. House Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said for a stand-alone bill to happen, her caucus needs language in the legislation to ensure it won't be vetoed. Republicans, she said, want that assurance, even though Walz signed the agreement with leaders that included the change. "Some of the things that we're looking at is if that would be broken out into a separate bill, there would have to be a guaranteed contingency—say, funding for MDH, or whatever that might look like—that would be a guarantee that that bill would both be passed and enacted," she said. If lawmakers do not finish by the weekend, the layoff notices will be sent Monday morning, Walz said. Failure to pass the rest of the budget by June 30 will trigger a partial government shutdown on July 1, the start of the next fiscal year. The governor told reporters he doesn't think that will happen, but nevertheless Minnesota Management and Budget—which oversees the state's finances and payroll and HR operations for state workers—is following protocols to prepare for that possibility. Some state services, agencies and programs would remain operational in that scenario because the Legislature did approve some budget bills before session ended last month, like spending plans for the judiciary and state government offices like the secretary of state and attorney general.