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Adams Suggests Finding Ways to Change NYC Sanctuary Laws to Comply with Trump Deportations

New York City Mayor Eric Adams suggested Wednesday his administration is looking at ways to craft alterations to sanctuary city laws. The mayor has railed against local laws that limit the city’s cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and has recently hinted at pursuing executive action to supersede those statutes, POLITICO reports. During an interview on FOX on Wednesday, the Democratic mayor suggested incoming border czar Tom Homan could have a say in the result. The two sat down to discuss migrants on Dec. 12. “We both agreed on: violent individuals should not remain in our country,” Adams said. “We have laws here in the city on how that could be handled. My legal team is going to sit down with his legal team to make the determination if an executive order can change that.”


Homan would like is access to Rikers Island, a city jail facility that houses detainees awaiting trial, Adams said. Current laws prohibit the city from allowing ICE to use municipal facilities. “The law that was passed under the previous administration said that no ICE officer can be in any governmental building. There are exceptions to that. We are looking at those exceptions," Adams said. Kayla Mamelak Altus, a City Hall spokesperson, said the meeting between the teams of attorneys is simply to hash out what might be legally possible to achieve their shared goals and is not indicative that Homan will be crafting policy or any potential executive order.

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