Wyomingâs lone U.S. House representative on Thursday announced her introduction of an act to keep student visas from being issued in âsanctuaryâ or anti-immigration-enforcement jurisdictions.
The bill would amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to prohibit student visas for colleges and other academic institutions in âsanctuary jurisdictions.â
Republican Rep. Harriet Hageman said in a Thursday statement that this matters because, âSanctuary cities are actively working against immigration laws put in place by representatives of the American people.â
Sheâs referring to areas like Colorado, which has state laws prohibiting local law enforcement from cooperating with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.
Hageman cited a Center for Immigration Studies statistic estimating 10,000 serious foreign criminals who were deportable and among whom there were felons have been âreleased back on the streets; many of them to the safety of sanctuary cities.â
Pulling student visas, said Hageman, is âan accountability measureâ to pressure leaders in those areas to rid their cities âof lawbreakers.â
Problem, Says Immigration Attorney
Though one Wyoming sheriff wasnât working smoothly with ICE last year, itâs difficult to tell if Wyoming has any sanctuary jurisdictions.
Thatâs because thatâs not an official legal term.
âAs I recall and understand (the term), it only came into lexicon during the last Trump administration,â Laramie-based immigration attorney Travis Helm told Cowboy State Daily on Thursday. âKind of like âwoke.ââÂ
If it becomes law, Hagemanâs bill would put the term into federal law.Â
The new definition would include any state or local government with laws, ordinances, regulations, resolutions, policies or other practices that obstruct immigration enforcement or shield criminals from ICE.
That can include anything that keeps agencies from complying with ICE detainers, imposes unreasonable conditions on ICE detainer requirements, denies ICE access to incarcerated aliens or otherwise impedes communication or exchanges between local officials and federal immigration officers.
Thatâs broad, said Helm.
âItâs whatever they want,â he said.Â
Helm also called the definition âridiculousâ and âauthoritarian.â
None In Wyoming
The University of Wyoming declined Thursday to comment on Hagemanâs bill.
UW sits within the town of Laramie, which has not drawn the scrutiny Teton County has on immigration practices.
Neither Teton's County seat of Jackson nor Laramie is listed as a sanctuary city on a Center for Immigration Studies map.Â
UWâs town is not a sanctuary city, officially.
âNot until they say it is,â countered Helm.
ICE declined to comment on the pending legislation.
Hageman in a Thursday email to Cowboy State Daily said politicians and community leaders in sanctuary cities and states are "aggressively opposing President (Donald) Trump and his promise to secure our border, reinstate the rule of law by enforcing our immigration laws, and make America safe again."
Hageman's bill is in line with other definitions of sanctuary jurisdiction now contemplated in Congress.Â
"My legislation," she continued, "is designed to ensure that there are real consequences to those who are pursuing an anti-American strategy, and who seek to elevate the interests of foreign nationals above our own citizens.â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





