California Senate Bill 54, the California Values Act, restricts state and local law enforcement from using resources to investigate, detain, or arrest persons for federal immigration purposes. The law applies to Riverside County Sheriff and county jails.
Government Code sections 7284 to 7284.12, enacted by SB 54 in 2017, prohibit California law enforcement from inquiring into immigration status, holding individuals on ICE detainers without a judicial warrant, or providing release dates except for those convicted of specified serious or violent offenses. The Riverside County Sheriff's Department must comply with these statewide limits. SB 54 does not create a true sanctuary, because notification is permitted for many felonies. The Attorney General publishes annual model policies, and the California Department of Justice oversees compliance reviews.
Unlawful immigration cooperation by deputies can trigger Attorney General audits, civil-rights litigation, and discipline. Federal civil-rights claims may follow improper detainer holds without judicial warrant.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Corona, CA
Corona Municipal Code Title 6 prohibits dogs from barking, howling, or making noise that disturbs neighbors for sustained or repeated periods. Riverside Coun...
Corona, CA
Corona regulates leaf blowers under its general noise ordinance in Corona Municipal Code Chapter 9.36, restricting use during early morning, evening, and nig...
Corona, CA
Corona allows wood, vinyl, masonry block, wrought iron, tubular steel, and stucco fences in residential zones. Barbed wire, razor wire, electric fences, and ...
Corona, CA
Corona requires dogs to be on a leash no more than 6 feet long when off the owner's property, in public spaces, and in city parks. Off-leash areas are limite...
Corona, CA
Corona generally restricts chickens and livestock to agricultural and equestrian zones, with limited allowances in some single-family residential zones depen...
Corona, CA
Recreational backyard fires in Corona are allowed only in approved fire pits, chimineas, or built-in fireplaces using clean firewood, with a 25-foot clearanc...
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See how Corona's sanctuary policy preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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