OAKLAND — Oakland police are scheduled to present a report on the department’s involvement in an Aug. 16 Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid at Tuesday’s City Council meeting.

The report normally would first be presented at a council committee meeting, but it was pulled off the Public Safety Committee’s agenda after a complaint was filed against police Chief Anne Kirkpatrick regarding the raid.

The item was added to the council’s agenda under a rule that allows people to add or remove items before it’s printed with the permission of the mayor, city manager, chair of the rules committee or the council president, Councilwoman Rebecca Kaplan confirmed. The typical procedure is for items to be scheduled by council members at the Rules Committee.

A presentation of the report previously was set for and then removed from the Nov. 14 meeting of the council’s Public Safety Committee. Even so, the raid became the main topic of discussion that day when Councilwoman Desley Brooks brought up what she called “serious policy issues” she noticed after speaking with Kirkpatrick.

The committee instructed Oakland police to appear at its Dec. 5 meeting to present a report it had already written and filed with the city clerk. Kaplan said the Public Safety Committee could still have police present the report at its Dec. 5 meeting, but it likely will only occur at Tuesday’s council meeting.

Two men — one 25 and one 19 — were detained during the raid of a Guatemalan family’s home Aug. 16 in West Oakland. Homeland Security officials at the time said agents served a search warrant there in connection with a human-trafficking investigation involving children.

The 25-year-old faces a civil deportation case, but no criminal charges. The 19-year-old was released and returned to the home.

Oakland police directed traffic while Homeland Security agents served the warrant.

Privacy Advisory Commission Chairman Brian Hofer, in a complaint against the chief filed with the Community Police Review Board, alleged Kirkpatrick provided false information to the public about whether anyone detained during the raid had been charged with a crime, when the police department severed a memorandum of understanding with Homeland Security as approved by the City Council, and whether the raid was a deportation matter. Oakland’s sanctuary policy prohibits local law enforcement from participating in federal immigration investigations.

Kaplan and Brooks introduced a new resolution that expands the sanctuary city policy to bar any branch of city government from cooperating with any ICE action. That resolution will be discussed at the Dec. 5 Public Safety Committee meeting.

Brooks, at the Nov. 14 Public Safety Committee meeting, said she was concerned after learning that Kirkpatrick had not actually seen the warrant that ICE agents served but relied on a call from a special agent in charge who reported the raid was a “criminal matter,” and that Mayor Libby Schaaf and one of her staffers were shown the sealed warrant “as a professional courtesy.”

The councilwoman also said she believed the chief had no “understanding or appreciation” for Oakland’s sanctuary city policy.

Schaaf issued a response to Brooks’ statements, saying federal agents showed her the search warrant Nov. 2 and she concluded the “operation was in fact a criminal investigation into human trafficking” in Oakland.

Homeland Security officials have maintained that the search warrant was served as part of an ongoing criminal investigation, and that Kirkpatrick has been truthful in her statements about the raid and Oakland police’s involvement.