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600 California Faith Leaders to Governor Newsom: Stop Transfers to ICE; Broaden Releases.

Six hundred faith and community leaders across California have signed the following faith letter urging Governor Gavin Newsom to suspend California’s role in collaborating with ICE in the transfer of immigrants who are eligible to be released from local and state custody to immigration detention facilities during the state of emergency.

The letter includes:

  • 53 endorsements from denominations, religious networks, conferences and non-profit organizations.
  • 600 signatures from faith leaders and organizations, including rabbis, imams, ministers, priests, sisters, lay leaders, buddhists, and many others.
  • 162 cities from the Bay Area, Silicon Valley, Central Valley, Los Angeles, and beyond

“Jewish history teaches us: When those who have the power of governance, have the power to save lives and don’t, because certain lives are considered disposable, history and faith will condemn these actions.” —Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb, Board Chair, Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity

Download the full letter and list of signatories:

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Faith leaders representing over 10 million of California’s religiously diverse electorate held a series of meetings with the governor’s office asking him to use his executive authority to protect and save lives of those incarcerated in prisons and immigration detention centers during the pandemic.  Faith leaders outlined several actions that the governor could take, the first being to stop the practice of transferring California residents who earn release from prison into the hands of ICE. 

“Our faith traditions demand we disrupt the dehumanizing practices of ICE.  575 people deemed safe for release from prisons have been transferred directly to ICE. They should be protected. They are our community members. It was disheartening to hear the excuses from the Governor’s office while families are living in fear of their loved ones being transferred to detention.”

Rev. Dr. Allison Tanner, Justice Advocacy Representative of the West,  Alliance of Baptists, a national network of 140 congregations. 

Despite their pleadings, on Monday, August 31st, two longtime California residents, Patricia Waller, a Belizean domestic violence survivor and Tien Pham, a Vietnamese refugee were transferred into ICE custody after earning release from state prisons.  Patricia Waller survived decades of abuse and won her release from prison after fifteen years of incarceration. Tien Pham had been incarcerated since he was an adolescent, and was granted parole by Gov. Newsom after two decades of incarceration. Both of them were denied the ability to reunite with family members and  adhere to their plan of re-entry and instead were transferred to ICE custody and  taken to a detention facility in Colorado. 

Faith leaders and Pham’s family recently met with the governor’s staff and urged the governor to halt the voluntary practice of ICE transfers.  Faith leaders submitted a written letter endorsed by 53 faith institutions and signed by 600 California faith leaders, urging the governor to stop the state’s practice of transferring non-citizens who earn release and parole into ICE detention.

Pham’s family waited for him outside of San Quentin State Prison on what was supposed to be his first day of freedom, but were not allowed to embrace him.  “Tien has been living away from our family for over 20 years in prison. Every day the thought of whether he is safe in prison or not stresses us, especially our elderly parents,” said Lien Pham, Pham’s youngest sister. “Now ICE has taken him away from our family again.”

Faith leaders expressed anger at the transfer of Waller and Pham on Monday and disappointment at the reluctance of the governor’s office to take bolder action to stop sending people into ICE detention.

“I thank Governor Brown for giving me a second chance. I had a Life Without Parole sentence and there are so many others like me who have been commuted, have come out and are flourishing. We are asking you to increase interviews, clemencies and commutations so people have a chance to go before the parole board.  There are many people incarcerated with Life Without Parole sentences who have done over 25 years incarcerated, are over age 50 and evidence shows are safe to be released.”

Taewon Jamil Wilson, from Families United to End Life Without Parole (FUEL), whose sentence was commuted in 2018

Faith leaders also urged the governor to increase clemencies, commutations and releases to protect the health and safety of all those incarcerated as thousands of those in the care of the California Department of Corrections have tested positive to COVID and where 49 people have already died. 

“While Governor Newsom boldly and courageously urges the general public to follow the science to help abate the coronavirus pandemic and uses his executive powers to assuage compliance, he waxes and wanes, however, in applying the science and appropriating his executive powers to protect the safety and well-being of the state’s carceral population. The Governor prefers to parcel out which lives matter. He fails to acknowledge that in the midst of a pandemic every person under the control of the CDCR matters, and that their past criminal history should not be a barrier to consideration of health protections and release.” 

Rev. Larry W. Foy, of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity, a statewide statewide interfaith network of  200 congregations and 2000 faith leaders

Faith communities also urged the governor to use the legal authority of the attorney general’s office to investigate, regulate and hold accountable private operators of detention facilities in the state where numerous deaths and health violations have been reported.

 “Catholic Social Teaching calls us to accompany and walk with those in need.  This is why we strongly oppose ICE transfers from jails and prisons during Covid-19, and call on the governor to increase the release of those held in detention centers and to investigate the inhumane conditions in these ICE facilities.”

Madeleine Kirkconnell, co-promoter of justice & peace for the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael and the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose.

Faith communities vow to continue to stand with families with loved ones incarcerated and detained noting that although the Governor ordered an executive moratorium on the Death Penalty in California in 2019, 78 persons incarcerated persons have died in California jails, prisons or detention centers since April 2020.

Organizations who were part of the meetings with the Governor’s office include: Interfaith  Movement for Human Integrity, United Methodist Church, California/Nevada Conference, City of Refuge Church of Los Angeles, Council on American Islamic Relations, California Catholic Conference of the Bishops of California, Dominican Sisters of San Rafael and the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose,  Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry of California, the Diocese of San Bernardino.

Religion News Service, September 7, 2020: “600 faith leaders sign letter urging California governor to stop transfer of incarcerated people to ICE”

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350 California Faith Leaders Sign a Letter to Judge Chhabria: “Life and Death for the Incarcerated”

Judges in this pandemic are arbiters of life and death for those incarcerated and in detention. As we collectively face this pandemic, everyone has the right to live.

Dear Judge Chhabria,

Three hundred thirty faith leaders and organizations across California have signed the following letter.

On behalf of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity (IM4HI), its member congregations, and other organizations and persons that seek the welfare of persons detained by ICE, thank you for issuing the Temporary Restraining Order … and for authorizing the release of detained persons impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. As members of the faith community, we implore you to do more to save lives.

We believe that everyone is capable of redemption, change and transformation, that past convictions do not define who a person is now and can become, and that immigration detention while a person’s immigration case is adjudicated is an unnecessary form of incarceration. We believe that everyone’s life is precious and request that you expedite the process and broaden the criteria for suitability for release…

This letter is signed by:

  • 45 Endorsers. These organizations include denominations, religious networks, conferences and non-profit organizations.
  • 330 Faith Leaders and Organizations. These signatures include Rabbis, Imams, Reverends, Priests, Sisters, Ministry Leaders, Buddhists, Pastors, and many others.
  • 62 Cities Across California. These signatures come from all over California. From the Bay Area, Silicon Valley, Central Valley, Los Angeles, and cities outside of California!

We prayerfully urge you to uphold human rights and consider the following when examining cases:

  • Immigration detention during the pandemic continues to threaten life and health.
  • Accelerating the release of detained people continues to be urgent.
  • Releasing people from detention has a positive impact for families directly impacted, as illustrated in the stories shared in the enclosed letter.
  • The faith community is prepared to support persons released from detention.
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Stop the San Quentin Outbreak

Photo featuring Alumita Siva. Photo by David Bacon

“Every person now in SQ is on death row. We pray also for the guards, staff and their families. they too deserve our compassion today. People treated as if their lives are expendable, but every person’s life is precious here.”
-Rabbi David Cooper, Emeritus, Kehilla Community Synagogue

On July 19, the interfaith community and families impacted by incarceration honored the lives lost in San Quentin due to COVID-19, called for the end of transfers, and lifted up the call for more releases. To view the powerful images from the vigil, see the photographs from local photographers David Bacon and Joyce Xi.

See the video here: https://vimeo.com/440742675

Our Interfaith Vigil lifted up the following demands, in line with the demands from loved ones who are incarcerated, including the campaigns for #ActNowNewsom (bit.ly/actnownewsom)  and #StopSQOutbreak (bit.ly/StopSQOutbreakDemands):

  • Governor Newsom must begin the process of drastically reducing the overall prison population to below 50% of current capacity. In order to achieve this level of decarceration, Governor Newsom must grant releases without categorical exclusions based on crimes of commitment or sentencing but be based on the current level of risk not past offenses.  We know that people can change and transform their lives.  Releases must include those who are serving Life Without Parole sentences, who are actually at the lowest risk of reoffending, and those on Death Row who comprise a majority of deaths by COVID-19. Release should be to families, the faith community, or community-based re-entry programs – not other prisons.
  • Governor Newsom and CDCR must immediately stop all transfers between California prisons, and from prisons to ICE detention centers. Transfers continue to spread the disease inside the prison system, to staff and outside communities. Immigration transfers of people who earn release and parole.  We believe all people are sacred and deserving of life, regardless of past convictions. 
  • Governor Newsom must release people beginning with those most vulnerable people, including transgender people, elderly, disabled, and those medically vulnerable. Transgender people are at disproportionate risk of harm and violence in prison. Prisons should not be a death sentence. All life is precious.
  • Immediately improve the care and treatment for people inside San Quentin. This includes restoring access to phones to communicate to loved ones, adequate testing, access to PPE, improved sanitation, hot meals, etc. This also includes, CDCR must ensure that the incarcerated trans community has access to hormones and healthcare immediately – before and after their release. We demand that all people imprisoned be treated with mercy, compassion, and human decency.

Call to Action: Join us to tweet, email, and call the Governor! Hashtags:  #StopSanQuentinOutbreak  #FreeThemAll  #FreeThemAllGov #StopICETransfers

See this Toolkit for ways more information: bit.ly/SQVigilToolkit

Ways to Stop the San Quentin Outbreak

Photo featuring opening prayer by Dean Hoaglin, Coast Miwok Indigenous Leader. Photo by Joyce Xi

Sample scripts, emails, and tweets can be found in the San Quentin Interfaith Vigil Toolkit.