Leaders of the southern California city of San Claimant, who are located almost Half half -way between Los Angeles and San Diego, are in partnership with US Customs and Border Protection so that passengers to keep surveillance cameras on the city coast Find the passengers trying to enter the country without permission.
In the Tuesday gathering of the Town City Council, members Ordered City Manager Andy Hall to start harmony with Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
Mayor Steven Nobluk – a Republican who was Selected On a public safety platform in November – told Los Angeles Times The purpose of the cameras is to find fishing boats, called Pangas, trying to try a dock on the beaches of the San Claimant and reduce the crime rate.
Nobluk told the LA Times, “People entered Pingas with illegal foreigners, hit our beach, and then scattered in society or jumped into the van, which stands nearby and receiving them. Ready for. “
He added: “The sophisticated Chilean thumbs of the San Claimant are important issues of crime that are hitting our palaces on a very organized basis and is a problem.”
California has forbidden law enforcement agencies to cooperate with federal immigration officials since 2017, when the state passed its “shelter” law in an attempt to stop deportation during the first Trump administration. Following Donald Trump’s victory in the November 2024 elections, Democratic California Governor Gavin Niaom gathered the state for a special legislative meeting for “Trump Proof”. But since the wildfire destroyed most parts of southern California, the state is now seeking federal assistance for rebuilding.
San Claimant City Council members have been the city before voting in support of CBP in Camera Initiative Consider Including legalism against the state’s sanctity law.
The San Claimant will not technically violate the state law of prohibition by harmonizing the CBP. This law especially prevents law enforcement agencies from cooperating with the CBP, but San Claimat does not have its own police force. Instead, the city will work directly with the border patrol.
Noblook suggested installing cameras that run 24/7 and travel about 7 7 miles.
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“I am recommending that the cameras aimed at a rooting telescope lens and night to watch the night,” Noblook told the LA Times. “This extra maternal auspicious is expected to interfere before [migrants] Kill our beaches. “
City officials are also considering ways to open access to footage to the public.
This is not the first time for a nine -block that the laws of California’s sanctity have been challenged. As a member of the City Council in 2022 Sponsored California has been called for a “shelter for life” – on the contrary, California laws allow abortion.
Nor is this the first time a California city has challenged the state’s sanctity law for immigrants. In December, San Diego County Sheriff said she would cooperate in the implementation of immigration and customs despite state laws that ban such activity.