US to try illegal immigrant for murder

Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez is led into the Hall of Justice for his arraignment in San Francisco, California. Francisco Sanchez, 45, was charged with murder for the shooting of Kathryn Steinle, 32. REUTERS/POOL/Michael Macor

Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez is led into the Hall of Justice for his arraignment in San Francisco, California. Francisco Sanchez, 45, was charged with murder for the shooting of Kathryn Steinle, 32. REUTERS/POOL/Michael Macor

Published Sep 4, 2015

Share

San Francisco - An undocumented immigrant accused of shooting a woman along San Francisco's famous waterfront in a killing that has ratcheted up the national debate over immigration will stand trial on murder and weapons charges, a judge ruled on Friday.

Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez was charged with murder and illegal possession of a firearm in the July 1 shooting of Kathryn Steinle, 32, as she walked arm-in-arm with her father along Pier 14 near the Ferry Building in a popular tourist area.

After Lopez-Sanchez was arrested, authorities revealed that he was a felon who had been deported five times to Mexico from the United States. The case rose to national prominence when Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump said Steinle's death was the result of failed US immigration policies.

It also highlighted San Francisco's status as a so-called sanctuary city, one of several hundred municipalities nationwide that in the 1980s and 1990s chose to limit assistance to federal authorities deporting people in their jurisdictions, initially as a way to protect refugees fleeing from wars in Central America.

Lopez-Sanchez had been in jail in San Francisco on a warrant for a decades-old marijuana offense. After the warrant was dismissed, sheriff's department officials released him, despite a detainer request from US immigration authorities.

Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi has said he would have needed a new warrant or judicial order to hold him longer.

But US Immigration and Customs Enforcement have said that if the agency had been notified Lopez-Sanchez would be released from jail, federal agents would have taken him into custody and deported him. They said they were never notified.

On Tuesday, Steinle's family filed wrongful death claims against Mirkarimi and two federal agencies, alleging negligence and other errors in his handling.

Reuters

Related Topics: