Chicago to sue Justice Department over sanctuary city policy: mayor

Chcago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said the city will file suit Monday.

“We are not going to be in a position between picking our values of who we are as a welcoming city and ... strengthening our police department,” Emanuel said on a radio show, "Connected to Chicago" on WLS-AM. "We find it unlawful and unconstitutional to be as a city coerced on a policy, and we think we have a strong case."

Sanctuary cities in general are municipalities that decline to cooperate with federal immigration officers in taking action against individuals based on their immigration status.

The announcement of a lawsuit comes after the Justice Department in late July escalated its promised crackdown on sanctuary cities, saying it will no longer award coveted grant money to cities unless they give federal immigration authorities access to jails and provide advance notice when someone in the country illegally is about to be released from jail.

Formerly, cities seeking the federal grant money needed only to show they were not preventing local law enforcement from communicating with federal authorities about the immigration status of people they have detained.

Chicago stands to lose a relatively small amount of federal money under the new policy, a $3.2 million public-safety grant that the city uses for police equipment, according to the Chicago Tribune and Emanuel's remarks on the radio show.