Justice

The Scapegoating of Sanctuary Cities

San Francisco has become an anti-immigration punching bag in the wake of a grisly killing. But there’s little evidence that the city’s sanctuary law was to blame.
Francisco Sanchez, right, is lead into the courtroom by San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi, left, and Assistant District Attorney Diana Garcia, center, for his arraignment Tuesday in San Francisco.Michael Macor/San Francisco Chronicle via AP

An undocumented immigrant named Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez allegedly shot and killed Kathryn Steinle on San Francisco's Embarcadero last Wednesday. And it turns out that the city's Sheriff's Department had released Lopez-Sanchez earlier this year after refusing an Immigration and Customs Enforcement request to detain him—all to comply with a city policy protecting everyday undocumented immigrants from deportation.

The political forecast of this case is, as you might guess, pretty stormy. It’s become an occasion to discuss America's "unsecured" borders and Mexicans' imaginary criminal proclivities, and to make cities into a convenient punching bag for conservatives, caricatures of out-of-touch liberal moral laxity toward dark-skinned criminal elements (if this sounds familiar, remember Baltimore).