Parents of woman shot at pier support strict immigration law

SAN FRANCISCO (KTVU-AP) — The parents of a woman shot to death on a San Francisco pier said Monday in a cable television news interview that they support a proposal to give mandatory prison time to deported people who return to the U.S. illegally.

Kathryn Steinle, 32, was walking along a waterfront in San Francisco when she was shot by a gun allegedly fired by Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, a Mexican national who was in the country illegally.

Lopez-Sanchez, 45, who has pleaded not guilty, had been released from jail months before the shooting, despite a federal immigration order asking local authorities to hold him.

Jim Steinle and Liz Sullivan, of Pleasanton, California, were interviewed by Fox News talk-show host Bill O'Reilly for a segment that aired Monday on The O'Reilly Factor.

The death of their daughter has fueled a national debate on immigration, with advocates of stricter border control denouncing San Francisco as a city whose immigrant "sanctuary" protections harbor people who are in the country illegally. Even some prominent Bay Area Democrats say Lopez-Sanchez should have been turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Supporters of sanctuary protections have jumped on O'Reilly and others, saying they have politicized the death. They say public safety is improved when immigrants can work with local police without fear of deportation.

To that, Jim Steinle said, "We're getting a little tired of the finger pointing, and we want to see some action."

Steinle, who was at his daughter's side when she was shot, and his wife said the proposed "Kate's Law" would be a good way to keep her memory alive. O'Reilly is collecting signatures for the petition, which would impose a mandatory five years in federal prison for people who are deported and return and 10 years for people caught a second time.

"We feel the federal, state and cities their laws are here to protect us," Jim Steinle said. "But we feel that this particular set of circumstances and the people involved, the different agencies let us down."

Federal records show Lopez-Sanchez had been deported three times before being sentenced to roughly five years in federal prison. He had completed another four years in federal prison when he was shipped to San Francisco March 26 on an outstanding 1995 drug charge.

The San Francisco District Attorney's office declined to prosecute, given the age of the case and the small amount of marijuana involved.

The San Francisco Sheriff's Department released Lopez-Sanchez on April 15, declining to honor a request by federal immigration authorities to keep Lopez-Sanchez in custody for 48 hours until they could pick him up for deportation proceedings.

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi has strenuously defended his decision, saying he was following city law, including a broader 1989 city "sanctuary" law and a more specific 2013 ordinance that applies specifically to federal immigration detainers.

Kate's brother Brad Steinle appeared later on the program, sharing a photo that Kate sent July 1st just minutes before she was shot and killed.

"We find solace in the fact that Kate was doing what she loved and she was with the man she loved most, my dad," her brother said.

Brad also talked about San Francisco's Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, whose policy allowed Lopez-Sanchez to be released in March from county jail without notifying immigration officials.

"There is no person that could tell me that that individual deserved to be walking around San Francisco," said Steinle.

Brad says his family is not political, but they do hope for political change.

"No father should hold their daughter as they take their last breath. No brother should feel like I feel with the loss of their sister and their best friend," said Steinle. "And no mother should bury their child."

Brad Steinle said his family wants to be involved in shaping some kind of Kate's Law, but not necessarily the exact one Bill O'Reilly proposed.

Steinle says they don't want anything too far left or too far right, just something that will keep people safe.