A groundbreaking new initiative from U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli is taking direct aim at California’s sanctuary city policies, offering the first serious federal-level counterstrike in years against local jurisdictions that shield criminal illegal aliens from deportation.
Dubbed Operation Guardian Angel, the effort is already yielding results in the Central District of California, home to some of the country’s most entrenched sanctuary city policies. By creatively leveraging judicial authority, Essayli and a multi-agency federal task force have found a way to force cooperation from uncooperative local officials — and the program is being hailed as a model for the rest of the nation.
Operation Guardian Angel works around local officials’ refusal to honor ICE’s administrative detainer requests by seeking full judicial warrants for felony reentry under 8 U.S.C. §1326 — a strategy sanctuary cities cannot legally ignore.
“Once a federal judge signs a warrant, local officials must comply,” Essayli told reporters. “They can’t claim ignorance or political discretion. They have no choice.”
The initiative, launched May 10, brings together ICE, the FBI, and three other federal law enforcement agencies in a joint task force based in Los Angeles. Already, ICE agents have made 13 arrests in just the first five days — with expectations of ramping up to 40–50 arrests per week, even under California’s notoriously obstructionist sanctuary laws.
California has long led the nation in sanctuary policies. As early as 1979, Los Angeles prohibited its police force from enforcing immigration law. Over the decades, cities like San Francisco codified layer upon layer of protections for illegal aliens, even those with violent criminal records.
From shielding rejected asylum seekers to banning ICE from being notified when dangerous individuals are released from custody, these policies have allowed thousands of criminal aliens to reenter American communities — with tragic consequences.
High-profile cases like the murder of Kate Steinle in San Francisco and Laken Riley in Georgia have highlighted the real cost of sanctuary policies. Both victims were killed by illegal aliens who had been previously arrested but released without ICE notification due to local non-cooperation.
According to DHS data, between 2021 and 2024 alone, more than 22,000 criminal illegal aliens were released from sanctuary jails without ICE being notified.
The genius of Essayli’s plan lies in the use of existing tools long neglected. Sanctuary jurisdictions typically ignore ICE detainers on the basis that they are administrative, not judicial. By converting detainer requests into enforceable criminal warrants, Operation Guardian Angel removes the legal gray area — and forces cooperation from even the most defiant cities.
There are 93 U.S. Attorney’s offices across the country — and none are legally prohibited from adopting Operation Guardian Angel’s methods. If implemented nationally, this program could dismantle the operational infrastructure of sanctuary cities coast to coast.
With an estimated 560 sanctuary jurisdictions across the U.S. currently refusing to notify ICE of criminal alien releases, the stakes couldn’t be higher.
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