Pubdate: Sat, 5 Jul 2008 Source: New York Times (NY) Page: 13, Section A Copyright: 2008 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Jesse McKinley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Gavin+Newsom Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/juvenile EARLY HITCH FOR AMBITIONS OF SAN FRANCISCO'S MAYOR SAN FRANCISCO -- Gavin Newsom, the popular and telegenic mayor of San Francisco, declared this week that he was forming an exploratory committee to consider a run for governor in 2010. His move was not surprising: convincingly re-elected last fall, Mr. Newsom, a Democrat, is riding a wave of local adoration. His embrace of same-sex marriage, and the California Supreme Court's ruling in May legalizing the marriages, also put him in the national spotlight. But his announcement came amid revelations in The San Francisco Chronicle about the city's handling of teenage Honduran crack dealers. Suddenly, Mr. Newsom was on the defensive and off message. On Sunday, The Chronicle reported that city officials had been shielding from federal authorities juvenile offenders who were in the country illegally, using San Francisco's longstanding "sanctuary city" policy as justification. The policy, approved by the Board of Supervisors in 1989, directs city employees not to cooperate with immigration enforcement actions by federal agencies. The Chronicle said that officials in the city's Juvenile Probation Department had been sending young Honduran drug dealers back to their native country on flights paid for by the city, with city probation officers often on board, rather than handing them to federal immigration officials. Mr. Newsom said the city had regularly cooperated with federal authorities on the handling of adult felons in the country illegally. The city's actions on juveniles, which date to 1989, are the focus of a federal criminal investigation, the paper reported, and federal officials recently detained a San Francisco probation officer in Houston, where he was on a trip intended to take two young drug suspects back to Honduras. A subsequent article revealed that eight juvenile crack dealers had disappeared from a Southern California juvenile facility where they had been sent by San Francisco officials. That article appeared on Tuesday, the day that Mr. Newsom revealed his ambition to be governor, and apparently surprised the mayor, who said he had been unaware of the policy. "We should have caught it earlier, and we didn't," Mr. Newsom said on Thursday. "And I take account for that." Law enforcement officials say juveniles are frequently used by drug cartels because charges against them are often less severe than they are for adults. Mr. Newsom said the city's approach had been developed by an array of officials in the city, including the district attorney, court officials, the public defender and officials in the Department of Juvenile Probation, to try to comply with both the sanctuary policy and state and federal laws. "It's something that's part of our history," Mr. Newsom said. The city attorney, Dennis Herrera, issued a short statement outlining the legal underpinning for the policy, citing local, state and federal laws, some of which provide protection and privacy for juvenile offenders. Mr. Newsom said that the juvenile policy had been revoked in mid-May and that city officials were working with Immigration and Customs Enforcement to develop new protocols, which he said would not use the city's sanctuary policy as "a shield for felons." "We do not allow sanctuary status to commit crimes," he said. "It never has for adults, and it was never intended to for anyone in juvenile policy." Mr. Newsom had little time this week to talk about his possible run for governor because of the questions about the city's sanctuary policy. Should he run for governor, he is expected to face stiff competition for the Democratic nomination, possibly from Jerry Brown, the former governor and current state attorney general, and Antonio R. Villaraigosa, the mayor of Los Angeles. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake