Opinion
Section 11369 of the Health and Safety Code (Section 11369) states that “[w]hen there is reason to believe that any person arrested for a violation [of any of 14 specified drug offenses 1 ] may not be a citizen of the United States, the arresting agency shall notify the appropriate agency of the United States having charge of deportation matters.” 2
*926 Claiming the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) “disregards” the mandate of this statute, Charles Fonseca (appellant), a taxpayer and resident of San Francisco, filed this petition for a writ of mandate commanding that Heather J. Fong, Chief of the SFPD, and the members of the San Francisco Police Commission, and the SFPD as real party in interest (collectively respondents), all comply with Section 11369.
Respondents demurred to the petition, claiming appellant has not and cannot state a cause of action inasmuch as Section 11369 is an unlawful state immigration law per se preempted by the exclusivity of the federal government’s constitutional power to regulate in this area. After issuing an order agreeing with respondents that the statute was per se preempted and sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend, the trial court dismissed the petition and entered judgment in favor of respondents.
We shall reverse the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
On March 21, 2007, prior to the commencement of this action, appellant’s counsel filed a request under the California Public Records Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.) seeking, among other things, records or other documentation indicating (1) the number of persons arrested by the SFPD for violations of the 14 drug offenses specified in Section 11369 during the past five years, (2) the number of such arrestees bom outside the United States or otherwise suspected of being foreign nationals, (3) the number of SFPD contacts with federal immigration authorities regarding such arrestees, and (4) “any and all written policies, manuals or any other form of documentation” indicating the SFPD’s training of officers for compliance with Section 11369 during the past five years. A representative of the SFPD responded in writing that the requested information could not be provided because the “SFPD does not track incidents in the manner you request.” 3
The petition, which contains but one cause of action and seeks a writ of ordinary mandate (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1085, 526a), was filed on May 4, 2007. Its chief allegation, that respondents and the SFPD unlawfully “disregard” Section 11369, is primarily based on a 2005 study by the federal Government Accountability Office (GAO) 4 and a 2007 report of the United *927 States Department of Justice (DOJ) 5 of which the trial court took judicial notice. The GAO report concluded, among other things, that 24 percent of the 55,322 aliens incarcerated in federal, state and local facilities during 2003 had been convicted of drug offenses, 97 percent of persons charged with unlawfully reentering this country had been previously arrested, and 50 percent of that group had been arrested for violent or drug-related offenses. (GAO Rep. 05-646R, supra, pp. 8-9.) Appellant attaches significance to these statistics apparently because he believes they support his allegation that the SFPD fails to comply with Section 11369, thereby enabling a significant number of drug offenders present in this country unlawfully to remain in San Francisco. According to the petition, the statistics set forth in the GAO report “clearly indicate that if the SFPD would comply with . . . [S]ection 11369, [appellant], and other residents of the City of San Francisco and citizens within the jurisdiction of the SFPD, would have a much lower chance of being victims of a violent crime committed by an illegal alien who was previously arrested for [one or more of the drug offenses specified] in . . . [S]ection 11369.” The petition additionally maintains that compliance with Section 11369 would reduce municipal expenditures relating to the incarceration of many persons arrested for such offenses, and thereby benefit appellant and other taxpayers.
Appellant’s claim that the SFPD fails to comply with Section 11369 also rests on the statement in the 2007 DOJ report that the San Francisco Field Office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a branch of the United States Department of Homeland Security, “has encountered difficulties in its attempt to expand the Criminal Alien Program (CAP)” in San Francisco due to the fact that administrators of the San Francisco County Jail “appear to have implemented a ‘bare minimum of cooperation with ICE and the CAP to ensure they are compliant with state rules and the SCAAP regulations’ ” issued by DOJ. (DOJ Audit Rep. 07-07, supra, p. 10.) 6
*928 For the foregoing reasons, the petition alleges that the policies, procedures, and practices of the SFPD relating to Section 11369, “are unlawful and void, and the SFPD must be prohibited from expending any further taxpayer funds or taxpayer-financed resources to enforce, maintain, or otherwise carry out in any manner the aforementioned policies, procedures, and practices . . . ,” 7
Respondents demurred to the petition on the ground that Section 11369 cannot create the ministerial duty to notify the appropriate federal agency that it has reason to believe an arrestee may not be a citizen because the statute impermissibly invades an area of regulation within and preempted by exclusive federal authority. Although the demurrer effectively concedes the truth of appellant’s allegation that the SFPD does not comply with Section 11369, and our review must assume the truth of all facts properly pleaded by appellant
(Evans
v.
City of Berkeley
(2006)
DISCUSSION
I.
Our review of the sufficiency of a complaint against a general demurrer, which is de novo, is guided by long-settled rules. “ ‘We treat the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded, but not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law. [Citation.] We also consider matters which may be judicially noticed.’ [Citation.] Further, we give the complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole and its parts in their context. [Citation.] When a demurrer is sustained, we determine whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. [Citation.] And when it is sustained without leave to amend, we decide whether there is a reasonable possibility that the defect can be cured by amendment: if it can be, the trial court has abused its discretion and we reverse; if not, there has been no abuse of discretion and we affirm. [Citations.] The burden of proving such reasonable possibility is squarely on the plaintiff. [Citation.]”
(Blank
v.
Kirwan
(1985)
“[A] ruling or decision, itself correct in law, will not be disturbed on appeal merely because given for a wrong reason. If right upon any theory of the law applicable to the case, it must be sustained regardless of the considerations which may have moved the trial court to its conclusion.”
(Davey
v.
Southern Pacific Co.
(1897)
n.
.The United States Constitution provides that the laws of the United States “shall be the supreme law of the land; . . . any thing in the Constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.” (U.S. Const., art. VI, cl. 2.) Since the decision in
McCulloch v. Maryland
(1819)
Federal authority to regulate immigration derives from various sources, including the federal government’s power “[t]o establish [a] uniform rule of naturalization” (U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 4), its power “[t]o regulate commerce with foreign nations”
(id.,
cl. 3), and its broad authority over foreign affairs.
(Toll
v.
Moreno
(1982)
*931
Nevertheless, not every state enactment or action “which [may] in any way deal[] with aliens is a regulation of immigration and thus
per se
pre-empted by this constitutional power, whether latent or exercised.”
(De Canas, supra,
The
De Canas
court established a three-part test for determining whether a state statute relating to immigration is preempted by federal law. The initial inquiry is whether the state statute constitutes an attempted “regulation of immigration” that is per se preempted because of the exclusivity of federal power to regulate in this area under the United States Constitution.
(De Canas, supra,
*932 The trial court found that Section 11369 failed the first De Canas test; that is, that the statute constitutes an impermissible state regulation of immigration preempted per se by the exclusivity of federal power to regulate in this area. Appellant urges us to reject that determination, and reverse the judgment, claiming Section 11369 does not in any way empower or require state or local law enforcement agencies to “determine” an arrestee’s nationality or the lawfulness of his or her presence in the United States, let alone to set the standards by which an arrested person may remain in this country.
Respondents see the matter differently. They contend that, unlike the California statute upheld in
De Canas, supra,
The trial court adopted respondents’ view, reasoning that Section 11369 invades exclusive federal power to regulate immigration because it effectively requires the SFPD “to act as an investigative arm of the federal deportation authorities.” The trial court based its conclusion not only upon the analysis set forth in
De Canas,
but also, and more specifically, on that of the United States District Court for the Central District of California in
League of United Latin American Citizens
v.
Wilson
(C.D.Cal. 1995)
III.
LULAC, supra,
The district court found that certain benefit denial provisions of Proposition 187 were not an impermissible regulation of immigration and preempted because, like the California statute upheld in
De Canas,
the denial of benefits affects immigration only indirectly or incidentally by causing persons not lawfully present in the United States to leave the state or not come here in the first place, and “such a denial does not amount to a ‘determination of who should or should not be admitted into the country.’ ”
(LULAC, supra,
*934
However, the
LULAC
court felt differently about various other provisions of Proposition 187; specifically, certain verification or “classification” provisions (i.e., those which require state officials or other state actors to determine the immigration status of arrestees and applicants for certain benefits or state services by classifying persons based on state-created categories of immigration status)
(LULAC, supra,
The specific provision of Proposition 187 most pertinent to our inquiry is section 4, entitled “Law Enforcement Cooperation with INS,” which added section 834b to the Penal Code.
11
As the
LULAC
court explained, section 4 “requires law enforcement agencies to verify the legal status of every arrestee who is ‘suspected of being present in the United States in violation of federal immigration laws’ by ‘questioning the person’ and ‘demanding documentation.’ [Citation.] Section 4 requires law enforcement agencies to ‘[n]otify the person of his or her apparent status as an alien who is present in the United States in violation of federal immigration laws and inform him or her that. . . he or she must either obtain legal status or leave the United States. [’] [Citation.] In addition, section 4 requires the agency to ‘[n]otify the Attorney General . . . and the [INS] of the apparent illegal status.’ [Citation.] Finally, section 4 requires law enforcement agencies to ‘fully cooperate with the
*935
[INS] regarding any person who is arrested if he or she is suspected’ of being in the United States illegally and prohibits any local governmental agency from limiting such cooperation in any way. [Citation.]”
(LULAC, supra,
The
LULAC
court concluded that the foregoing provisions “cannot be read except as a regulatory scheme; and indeed, defendants have not seriously urged any other reading.”
(LULAC, supra,
With the analysis in LULAC in mind, we turn to the question whether it supports the trial court’s ruling.
IV.
De Canas, supra,
Respondents’ argument and the trial court’s conclusion are not supported by
LULAC, supra,
Unlike section 4 of Proposition 187, Section 11369 does not require any state or local law enforcement agency to independently determine whether an arrestee is a citizen of the United States, let alone whether he or she is present in the United States lawfully or unlawfully. Nor does the statute create or authorize the creation of independent criteria by which to classify individuals based on immigration status, as did section 4 of Proposition 187. All of those determinations, as well as the duty to tell an arrestee who may be in this country unlawfully to either obtain legal status or leave, are left entirely to federal immigration authorities. Section 11369 is also different from section 4 of Proposition 187 in that it does not apply to all arrestees, but only to those persons arrested for one or more of 14 specified drug offenses. 13
*937
Section 11369 “may indirectly or incidentally affect immigration by causing [undocumented aliens] to leave the state or deterring them from entering California in the first place”
(LULAC, supra,
The duty imposed on arresting officers by Section 11369 seems to us more like those upheld in
Gates, supra,
The LAPD changed its policy in 1979. As the
Gates
court pointed out, the new policy, set forth in LAPD Special Order No. 40, no longer permitted detention or arrest of undocumented aliens solely on account of their illegal status. An officer was directed to contact federal authorities only when a person arrested on state charges was suspected of being in this country unlawfully.
14
For this reason, the court held that “LAPD’s transfer of legitimately obtained arrest information to the INS does not constitute enforcement of the civil provisions of the INA.”
(Gates, supra,
Responding to the plaintiffs’ contention that the mere questioning of an arrestee about his or her immigration status is constitutionally defective, because its purpose is to enforce the civil provisions of the INA, the court
*938
stated as follows: “Where an LAPD officer legitimately comes across information in the course of investigating a crime which reasonably leads to the belief the person arrested is illegally present, in this country,
nothing in either the state or the federal constitution prevents the officer from advising INS of this
data!
15
]”
(Gates, supra,
*939 We agree that the LAPD special order upheld in Gates does not impermissibly intrude upon the exclusive federal power to enforce the civil provisions of the INA. Though the new order touches upon enforcement of the civil provisions of federal immigration law, it does not require or empower LAPD officers to initiate police action to discover a person’s alien status, to determine the lawfulness or unlawfulness of an arrestee’s immigration status, to set the standards by which an arrestee may remain in this country, or to effectuate the removal of an arrestee determined to be present in this country unlawfully. Gates is therefore consistent with our conclusion that Section 11369 is not per se preempted. 17
V.
Respondents rely very heavily on the proposition that Section 11369 cannot plausibly be deemed to serve any purpose other than that of impermissibly regulating immigration. They say that, like the per se preempted provisions of section 4 of Proposition 187, “Section 11369 can have only one purpose: to mandate cooperation with the federal immigration officials ‘solely for the purpose of ensuring that such persons leave the country.’ ” The trial court agreed, stating that “Section 11369 cannot be regarded as even primarily about drug use, sale, or possession, because it adds nothing to the State’s regulatory scheme for those matters.” As should be clear, our conclusion that Section 11369 is not an impermissible state regulation of immigration turns on its text, which no party finds ambiguous, not on any assumption regarding its purpose. Nevertheless, given that the trial court’s determination appears to have rested in some degree on its perception of the legislative purpose of Section 11369—as the
LULAC
court’s assessment of Proposition 187 rested in part on its perception that section 4 of that measure was aimed solely at regulating immigration
(LULAC, supra,
In 1951, two years before the Legislature amended Section 11369 into its present form, the California Senate created the Interim Committee on Narcotics and Hypnotics. The resolution creating the committee (Sen. Res. No. 187 (1951 Reg. Sess.)) explains (by means of three whereas clauses) that the *940 Senate created the interim committee because “recent reports of the pathetic and tragic cases of narcotic addictions by teen-age youngsters have shocked the citizens of this State; and H] ... It is the belief of our own enforcement agencies that there exists a deliberate exploitation of naive boys and girls by drug traffickers, who aim to open up a new market by enslaving a huge new crop of addicts; and [][]... There is urgent need for a comprehensive study of the means to deal with this death-dealing type of racket and to stamp out illicit drug traffic . . . .” (Ibid.)
Two years later, during the same regular session in which the Legislature amended Section 11369 into its present form (Stats. 1953, ch. 1770, § 9, p. 3527), the interim committee issued its 43-page report, which focused upon the public debate then taking place in California about whether to significantly increase penalties for offenses involving the sale and use of narcotics. (Sen. Interim Com. on Narcotics & Hypnotics, Rep., 2 Appen. to Sen. J. (1953 Reg. Sess.).) The report stated that “[m]any individuals and civic bodies have communicated with this committee expressing their desires that the Legislature enact more severe penalties. The change most frequently suggested is that the death sentence be imposed upon those convicted of supplying narcotics to minors.” (Id. at p. 20.) Rejecting this idea as “unrealistic” (i d. at p. 22), the committee deferred instead to the view of experts that history “indicates that it is certainty and celerity of arrest and conviction that deters offenders rather than severe penalties” (id. at p. 23). The report also noted that much of the narcotics sold and used in this state was smuggled in through Mexican nationals also present in this state unlawfully, and that “the present staff of federal agents at [the major] ports of entry in San Diego and Imperial County is totally incapable of effecting the necessary search.” (Id. at p. 17.) 18
The present language of Section 11369 evidently reflects a legislative conviction that federal deportation of persons arrested for selling or using narcotics and reasonably believed to be noncitizens could be effectuated with much greater “certainty and celerity” (if federal authorities determined they were unlawfully present in this country) than the prosecution and conviction of such persons for violation of state narcotics laws, and that exposure of such persons to swift imposition of that civil penalty would help “stamp out *941 illicit drag traffic” in California. Other aspects of the legislative history confirm this view. For example, the letter from the author of the bill to the Governor asking him to sign the measure enacting Section 11369 in its present form described it as “the main narcotics bill” enacted by the Legislature that session. (Assemblyman H. Allen Smith, letter to Governor Earl Warren, June 8, 1953, Governor’s chaptered bill file on Assem. Bill No. 2238 (1953 Reg. Sess.) (unpaginated).) A memorandum sent by the author of the measure to all members of the Legislature identifies each of the numerous individuals who had assisted in its drafting. All were representatives of state or federal agencies charged with enforcement of narcotics laws; none represented an agency or organization primarily interested in enforcement of federal immigration laws. (Assemblyman H. Allen Smith, mem. No. 2 to all members of the Cal. Leg., Apr. 6, 1953 [entitled “Proposed Narcotic Legislation”], Governor’s chaptered bill file on Assem. Bill No. 2238 (1953 Reg. Sess.).) Significantly, the Assembly Committee on Judiciary reported that the bill “to require that the agency arresting any person for a narcotic violation must notify the appropriate agency of the United States having charge of deportation matters when there is reason to believe that said person is not a citizen of the United States” was considered and passed as part of a package of measures that were all designed “to prevent narcotics from entering the Country.” (Final Rep. of Subcom. on Narcotics, Progress Rep. to the Leg. (1953 Reg. Sess.), Assem. Interim Com. on Judiciary, supra, pt. XV, at pp. 240, 255, italics added.)
Finally, if the chief legislative purpose of Section 11369 was the regulation of immigration rather than of the sales and use of narcotics, the measure would not have been limited to persons arrested only for narcotics offenses, and the statute would more likely have been placed in the Penal Code, not in the Health and Safety Code where it and predecessor statutes always appeared in a division, chapter, and article relating to offenses and penalties under the California Uniform Controlled Substances Act (Health & Saf. Code, § 11000 et seq.) or earlier narcotics laws.
The foregoing legislative history makes it clear that, unlike the provisions of Proposition 187 declared preempted in
LULAC, supra,
VI.
There remain the questions whether Section 11369 is preempted under the second or third tests set forth in
De Canas, supra,
As previously noted (see discussion, ante, at p. 928, In. 7) the INA prohibits any state or local governmental entity or official from prohibiting “or in any way restricting], any governmental entity or official from sending to, or receiving from, the [federal immigration authorities] information regarding the citizenship or immigration status, lawful or unlawful, of any individual.” (8 U.S.C. § 1373(a).) Additionally, the INA prohibits any person or agency from prohibiting or in any way restricting a state or local government entity from “doing any of the following with respect to information regarding the immigration status, lawful or unlawful, of any individual: [f] (1) Sending such information to, or requesting or receiving such information from, the [ICE]. [][] (2) Maintaining such information, [f] (3) Exchanging such information with any other Federal, State, or local' government entity.” (8 U.S.C. § 1373(b).) Finally, the INA requires ICE to respond to any inquiry by a state or local government agency “seeking to verify or ascertain the citizenship or immigration status of any individual within the jurisdiction of the agency for any purpose authorized by law, by providing the requested verification or status information.” (8 U.S.C. § 1373(c).)
The foregoing provisions of the INA definitively establish that, as respondents virtually concede, (1) it was
not
“ ‘ “the clear and manifest purpose of Congress” ’ ” to effect a “complete ouster” of “state power to promulgate laws not in conflict with federal laws” pertaining to the regulation of immigration
(De Canas, supra,
*943 DISPOSITION
The judgment entered by the trial court in respondents’ favor on the basis of its order sustaining their demurrer without leave to amend is reversed. The matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings to factually determine whether, as respondents alternatively claim, the SFPD complies with Section 11369.
Haerle, J., and Lambden, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 17, 2008, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
Namely, those described in sections 11350, 11351, 11351.5, 11352, 11353, 11355, 11357, 11359, 11360, 11361, 11363, 11366, 11368 or 11550 of the Health and Safety Code.
As originally enacted in 1939 as part of the omnibus measure creating the Health and Safety Code, as section 11715.5 thereof, the statute stated that “Any person not a citizen of the United States of America who is convicted of violating [four specified sections of the Health and Safety Code], or of committing any offense referred to in those sections shall be reported to the appropriate agency of the United States having charge of deportation matters. [][] The certificate shall be issued by the court in which the conviction takes place, shall recite the facts of the case, and recommend that the defendant be deported.” (Stats. 1939, ch. 1097, p. 3026; id., ch. 60, p. 772, italics added.) The language of the statute was amended to its present form in 1953. (Stats. 1953, ch. 1770, § 9, p. 3527.) All subsequent amendments (Stats. 1954, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 12, § 2, p. 259; Stats. 1959, ch. 1112, § 12, p. 3196; Stats. 1991, ch. 573, § 2, p. 2689) simply increased the number of drug offenses for which an arrest triggers the notification requirement. The language of the statute was moved from section 11715.5 of the Health & Safety Code to section 11369 of that code in 1972. (Stats. 1972, ch. 1407, § 3, pp. 2987, 3019.)
This response ignores the fact that, as will be seen, the SFPD has a written policy, set forth in a Departmental General Order, regarding compliance with Section 11369 (see discussion, post, at p. 928, fn. 8) and there appears to have been no justification for SFPD’s failure to provide it.
GAO, Information on Certain Illegal Aliens Arrested in the United States, GAO-05-646R (Apr. 2005) (GAO Report 05-646R).
DOJ, Office of the Inspector General, Cooperation of SCAAP Recipients in the Removal of Criminal Aliens from the United States, Audit Report 07-07 (Jan. 2007) (DOJ Audit Report 07-07). (SCAAP is an acronym for the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program, a federal program administered by the United States Attorney General under the authority of 8 U.S.C. § 1231(i).)
Counsel for the parties advised us at oral argument that the San Francisco County Jail is administered by the San Francisco Sheriff, not by respondents or the SFPD. In
Gates
v.
Superior Court
(1987)
Appellant also relies upon a provision of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (DMA) providing that, “[notwithstanding any other provision of Federal, State, or local law, a Federal, State, or local government entity or official may not prohibit, or in any way restrict, any government entity or official from sending to ... the Immigration and Naturalization Service [now ICE] information regarding the citizenship or immigration status, lawful or unlawful, of any individual.” (8 U.S.C. § 1373(a).) As we understand appellant’s position it is that, as a practical matter, SFPD’s official policy purporting to implement Section 11369 (which we describe presently) actually restricts compliance with that statute by SFPD officers. This argument involves factual issues not previously presented to and adjudicated by the trial court. We consider the foregoing provision of the DMA only to the extent it bears upon whether Section 11369 is preempted. While, as we later explain, the federal statute is relevant to the question of preemption under some of the tests (see discussion,
post,
at p. 942), it is irrelevant to the question whether Section 11369 is per se preempted, as the trial court found, because a state law invading an area reserved exclusively to the federal government under the Constitution cannot be saved by a congressional enactment.
(De Canas
v.
Bica
(1976)
Respondents’ alternative claim that they comply with the statute is apparently based, at least in part, on the SFPD’s departmental general order No. 5.15 (Dec. 13, 1995) (DGO 5.15), the stated purpose of which “is to establish policies regarding the enforcement of immigration laws and cooperation with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) [now ICE] in conformity with state and federal laws and the City of Refuge Ordinance, San Francisco Administrative Code Section 12H.2-1.” DGO 5.15 declares that while it is the policy of the SFPD “to foster trust and cooperation with all people of this City and to encourage them to communicate with San Francisco police officers without fear of inquiry regarding their immigration status . .. [and also] to adhere to the City of Refuge Ordinance” (which ordinarily prohibits the use of city resources to assist in the enforcement of federal immigration laws) (DGO 5.15, § I.A), immigration status information may be released to federal authorities “[wjhen a person has been arrested for [one or more of the 14 offenses listed in Section 11369], and there is reason to believe that the person may not be a citizen of the United States.” (DGO 5.15, § I.B.4.a.) The DGO also declares that “[s]uch belief cannot be based solely upon a person’s inability to speak English or his/her ‘foreign’ appearance.” (Ibid.) *929 Under DGO 5.15, a police officer may also inquire into an individual’s immigration status or release such information to federal immigration authorities “[w]hen a person is in custody after being booked for the alleged commission of a felony and is suspected of violating the civil provisions of the immigration laws,” or “has previously been convicted of a felony committed in violation of the laws of the State of California which is still considered a felony under state law” or “the INS makes a request for information about [such] a person . . . .” (DGO 5.15, § I.B.4.b, c.)
Though Section 11369 does not mandate state or local enforcement of the
criminal
provisions of the INA, it deserves to be noted that preemption principles do not bar state and local law enforcement officers from enforcing those provisions. Unlike the civil provisions of the INA, which are so comprehensive that no opportunity for state activity remains, the criminal provisions of the INA (8 U.S.C. §§ 1323-1328) are few and simple and it is settled that the federal government has not occupied the field of criminal immigration enforcement.
(Gonzales
v.
City of Peoria
(9th Cir. 1983)
Acknowledging that benefits denial can only occur after an applicant’s legal status has been “ ‘determined,’ ” the
LULAC
court pointed out that in administering state-federal benefits programs “state agents merely access INS information to verify an applicant’s immigration status—no independent determinations are made and no state-created criteria are applied. A requirement that state agents merely
verify
immigration status by referring to INS information is much different from a requirement that state agents actually make determinations as to who is, and who is not, deportable under federal law. Permitting state agents, who are untrained— and unauthorized—under federal law to make immigration status decisions, incurs the risk that inconsistent and inaccurate judgments will be made. On the other hand, requiring state agents simply to verify a person’s status with the INS involves no independent judgment on the part
*934
of state officials and ensures uniform results consistent with federal determinations of immigration status.”
(LULAC, supra,
Though its mandatory provisions concerning verification/classification, notification, and cooperation/reporting were declared preempted, and are therefore not enforceable (see
The court conceded that “the benefits denial provisions also have the purpose of deterring illegal aliens from entering or remaining in the United States, and arguably may be viewed as part of the same regulatory scheme . ..”
(LULAC, supra,
The apparent purpose of that limitation is discussed, post, at pages 939-942.
Special Order No. 40 stated that “ ‘undocumented alien status in itself is not a matter for police action’ and directed officers not to ‘initiate police action with the objective of discovering the alien status of a person.’ Additionally, officers were advised not to arrest or book persons for violations of 8 U.S.C. section 1325 (improper entry by alien).”
(Gates, supra,
In
American G.I. Forum v. Miller
(1990)
In making this determination, the
Gates
court relied on a 1984 opinion of the California Attorney General (
The Attorney General has subsequently indicated that the sort of cooperation with federal immigration officials mandated by Section 11369 is constitutionally permissible. In 1992, a Bay Area legislator asked for an opinion on the following question: “May a city prohibit its officers and employees from cooperating in their official capacities with Immigration and Naturalization Service investigation, detention, or arrest procedures relating to alleged violations of the civil provisions of the federal immigration laws.” (
Curiously, the discussion in
Gates
of the issue of federal preemption makes no reference to
De Canas, supra,
In 1952, the joint Subcommittee on Narcotics that had been created a year earlier by the Assembly Interim Committees on Judiciary and Public Health also issued a report discussing, among other things, the relationship between the increasing amounts of marijuana and opium being smuggled into California from Mexico and the growing “illegal entry of Mexican farm laborers into the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valley, their population therein at times being estimated to be as high as 20,000.” (Final Rep. of Subcom. on Narcotics, Progress Rep. to the Leg. (1953 Reg. Sess.) by Assem. Interim Com. on Judiciary (Jan. 1953), pt. XV, p. 232.)
