Embattled San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi convincingly lost his
bid for re-election Tuesday after spending months in the national
spotlight as the face of his city's controversial "sanctuary city"
policy on illegal immigration.
Mirkarimi, 54, was defeated by Vicki Hennessy, a former sheriff's
official who had the endorsement of San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee and the
sheriff deputies association. With 42 percent of precincts reporting,
Henessy had received 63 percent of the vote to 31 percent for Mirkarimi.
Mirkarimi and his office received heavy criticism after Mexican
illegal immigrant Francisco Sanchez allegedly shot and killed
32-year-old Kate Steinle on San Francisco's waterfront July 1. Sanchez
had been released from Mirkarimi's jail in March even though federal
immigration officials had requested that he be detained for possible
deportation.
San Francisco declared itself a sanctuary city in 1989, passing an
ordinance that bans city officials from enforcing immigration laws or
asking about immigration status unless required by law or court order. A
follow-up ordinance in 2013 allows detention only under a court order
targeting violent felons. Last month, San Francisco's board of
supervisors unanimously approved a resolution to maintain the city's
sanctuary status.
San Francisco and other cities and counties have routinely ignored
requests from Immigration and Customs Enforcement officals to keep
people in custody. The jurisdictions say they can't hold arrestees
beyond their scheduled release dates without probable cause.
Hennessy has previously said the sheriff's order barring the San
Francisco jail from cooperating with immigration officials is misguided.
There are cases, she said, when federal immigration officials should be
notified that the jail is about to release an inmate who is in the
country illegally.
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