Recent state law prohibits law enforcement agencies from investigating, interrogating, detecting, or arresting persons for immigration protection functions.
Democrats in position on Tuesday rejected legislation that would have allowed the imprisonment of fentanyl-dealing illegal immigrants in California’s sanctuary law.
The council member remarked,” This bill is simply a vote on the shelter condition plan as it relates to morphine dealers.”
” I do n’t think the current law is effective, and I think we need to give law enforcement more tools to safeguard our California communities.” AB2209 is a decision. It’s a decision between fixing our fentanyl issue or doing nothing”, she added.
California’s existing law prohibits law enforcement agencies from investigating, interrogating, detecting, or arresting persons for immigration protection functions.
There are a few exceptions to this ban, including transferring people without a court order and providing specific details to provincial authorities about severe and violent felons in custody.
Any California law enforcement agency carrying out any obligations under the purview of the proposed bill “additionally except, for the functions of the act, any person who is alleged to possess violated, or who has been previously convicted of violating, specific rules relating to fentanyl,” is excluded from the proposed costs.
” Californian Democrats just killed my bill to end sanctuary state protections for felony fentanyl dealers. If Sacramento gives them tools to evade deportation, how can we crack down on criminal cartel drug dealers? she asked.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( CDC ), fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is up to 50 times stronger than heroin. This is a significant contributor to drug overdoses in the United States.
According to the California Overdose Surveillance Dashboard, there were 7, 385 opioid- related deaths in California in 2022, of which 6, 473 were fentanyl- related.
The governor, a Democrat, said that operations supported by the state’s National Guard, or CalGuard, led to the seizure of a record 62, 224 pounds of fentanyl in the state and at ports of entry in 2023, marking a 1, 066 percent increase since 2021.
According to calculations based on the Los Angeles High- Intensity Drug Trafficking Area price sheet for that year, the street price for the intercepted fentanyl would be about$ 67 million.
” Fentanyl is a poison, and it does not belong in our communities”, the governor said.
” California is cracking down, increasing seizures, expanding access to substance abuse treatment, and holding drug traffickers accountable to combat the immeasurable harm opioids have caused our communities”, he added.
According to the U. S. Drug Enforcement Administration, two milligrams of fentanyl is considered a potentially lethal dose, and one kilogram of the drug has the potential to kill 500, 000 people.
Lorenz Duchamps provided writing for this article.