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California sheriff vows to defy statewide sanctuary law: ‘This is common sense’

A California sheriff is bucking his state’s sanctuary law – and now he’s in the state attorney general’s crosshairs.

In February, Amador County Sheriff Gary Redman – in a rural community east of Sacremento – pledged to ignore a 2017 law that he says hamstrings his office’s ability to work with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other federal agencies.

Two, months later, Redman is sticking by his guns.

Amador County Sheriff Gary Redman says he will defy statewide sanctuary laws and contact ICE regarding illegal immigrants. Amador County Sheriff's Office

“How can you tell me that I have to let somebody who is here illegally in the country… and put them back into society when they’ve committed a heinous crime?” .

The law in question is the California Values Act, or SB 54, which allows local authorities to contact ICE only when an illegal immigrant is convicted of certain offenses and is about to be released from custody.

Redman’s stance puts him at odds with California Attorney General Rob Bonta, who has pledged to protect immigrant communities up and down the Golden State by weilding the sanctuary law — despite critics saying it allows criminal illegal immigrants to walk the streets and possibly reoffend.

But Redman isn’t backing down.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem tours the San Ysidro Port of Entry at the US-Mexico border in San Diego, Calif. on March 16, 2025. POOL/AFP via Getty Images

“You’re making me make that choice. Well, I’m just not willing to do it because I got elected to be the sheriff of Amador County, where public safety is my No. 1 priority,” he said. 

State lawmakers passed SB 54 during the first Trump administration to undermine the president’s aggressive immigration policies. 

It has since been a constant sore point between the state’s Democratic government and tough-on-crime Republicans. 

“I worked in the justice system for years and saw how weak laws put the public in danger,” California Republican Party Chair Corrin Rankin told Fox News Digital.

Despite the low figure, Asian gangs with illegal immigrants have set up marijuana-growing operations in the area, Redman said. 

Sheriffs officer stand guard in front of a pro-immigration protest in San Diego on Feb. 21, 2025. REUTERS

“What we’re hearing from Sheriff Redman is what many in law enforcement have been saying for a long time: California’s sanctuary state law makes it harder to stop violent criminals.”

“Democrats in Sacramento passed these laws knowing they tie the hands of sheriffs and police. When local officials see a threat, they should be able to act,” Rankin added. 

Around 6% of Amador County’s 42,000 residents are foreign-born, according to US Census data. Statewide, the figure is about 22%. 

Despite the low figure, migrant gangs have set up illegal marijuana-growing operations in the area, Redman said.

Coast Guard Rear Admiral Joseph Buzzella speaks with Kristi Noem during a briefing on board the US Coast Guard Cutter Elm on March 16, 2025. POOL/AFP via Getty Images

“That’s what we dealt with over the last 10 years,” Redman said.

The sheriff announced his stance on the sanctuary state law in a February news release posted to the Amador County Sheriff’s Office Facebook page after residents peppered his office with questions about how they would deal with the migrant crisis during President Trump’s second term.

While other sheriffs across the state have said they will work around SB 54, Redman who has said he is openly defying the law.

In an email to Fox News Digital, Bonta’s office noted that federal courts have ruled that the state sanctuary law doesn’t conflict with federal law.

“The Attorney General is committed to protecting and ensuring the rights of California’s immigrant communities and upholding vital laws like SB 54, which ensure that state and local resources go toward fighting crime in California communities, not toward federal immigration enforcement,” the email states.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during an press conference on Jan. 28, 2025. AFP via Getty Images

“Federal courts have upheld SB 54 and have found it to not be in conflict with federal law (the Ninth Circuit’s 2019 opinion is attached for reference),” his office said. “We are closely monitoring law enforcement compliance with SB 54.”

Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., who recently introduced federal legislation that would enable local authorities that wish to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement to do so regardless of any state law, cited the case of David Mora, 39, who overstayed his visa after entering California in 2018 from Mexico. 

In 2022, ICE asked to be notified upon Mora’s release from jail after his arrest for assaulting a California Highway Patrol officer. The Merced County Sheriff’s Office had Mora in custody and received a request from ICE to detain him, but Mora was released because of the sanctuary law, the sheriff’s office said.

He then killed his three daughters inside a Sacramento church as well as a chaperone who was supervising his visit with the children, before taking his own life. 

Migrants make board a van after illegally crossing into the US and waiting to apply for asylum on Jan. 21, 2025. AP

“There is no doubt in my mind that if I was able to cooperate with ICE, this tragedy could have been avoided,” Merced County Sheriff Vernon H. Warnke said in a  “Under current law, nationwide law enforcement’s hands are tied with policies that have a significant impact on our communities and their quality of life.”

“The sanctuary law is utterly indefensible,” Kiley told Fox News Digital. “It has led to many, many tragedies across the state. It’s one of the reasons California has had the very worst illegal immigration problem during the Biden administration.”

He added the law was “legally dubious” in that it seeks to violate federal law.

Redman, who grew up in progressive Los Angeles County, said he partially came out publicly with his stance on the sanctuary law because of the Trump administration and its willingness to defend local officials who work with ICE. 

“I’ve always felt this way, but there wasn’t a chance in hell I was going to say this under the Biden administration,” Redman said. “I didn’t trust the attorney general at the time. I didn’t trust the Biden administration as far as coming after me. Absolutely, I don’t think that’s going to happen under the Trump administration.”

Tens line up at the US-Mexico border wall on Jan. 22, 2025. CAROLINE BREHMAN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Among California sheriffs, Redman, who considers himself a moderate Republican, stands alone. 

Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, a Republican who is running to become California’s next governor, has advocated for abolishing sanctuary state policies and requiring local law enforcement to cooperate with federal immigration authorities. 

In addition to Redman, leaders of two California cities, Huntington Beach and Oroville, have defiantly declared themselves non-sanctuary cities. In Amador County, nearly 49% of voters are registered Republicans, dwarfing the 27% who align with Democrats, according to the California Secretary of State’s office. 

That could be a reason why a Change.org petition calling for Redman to be removed has only received 53 signatures since March 1. “I’m friends with a lot of progressives here in Amador County, and what they’ve always found is I’m reasonable and I’m willing to listen,” Redman said. “My Democratic friends have come out and said, ‘We support you, Gary. This is common sense. We’re tired of California and the way California’s going where they continue to elevate criminals.’”

Fox News Digital reached out to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), various immigrant rights groups, the Amador County and statewide Republican and Democratic parties, and the governor’s office for comment on the matter.