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From Wendy Fry and Sergio OlmosCalmness
This story was originally published by CalmattersS Register about their ballots.
The Trump administration on Thursday has asked the Supreme Court to cancel a temporary restraining order that blocks the “roving” immigration stops in Los Angeles and eight other cities in California.
In an emergency appealThe Federal Government claims that the order is a significant barrier for the implementation of federal immigration laws. The request for a stay was filed with the Supreme Court’s emergency doom, so the oral arguments are not likely.
A lawyer of the plaintiffs in the original claim – a coalition of civil rights, rights of immigrants and local government agencies – said they were enjoying to argue the case before the Supreme Court.
“The federal government is already running in the Supreme Court asking to annul a close court order – applicable only in one court district – which simply forces them to follow the Constitution.” Mohammed Tajsar said, a senior lawyer at ACLU Foundation in Southern California.
US distributed Judge Maam Evri-Meneza Frimpong Issued the temporary restraining order last month in Central County of CaliforniaReferring to a “mountain of evidence” that the aggressive tactics of the administration of the government probably violate the rights of the fourth amendment of people against unreasonable searches and seizures.
Trump’s Lawyer, D. John Sauer, argued in the submission to the Supreme Court that Frimpong’s order places “Straitjacket” of agents and “threatens to regain immigration officers’ ability to impose immigration laws … by suspending the perspective of disrespect.
Frimpong manages federal immigration authorities cannot rely on four factors of reasonable suspicion: race, ethnicity, language and location or employment; or only in combination.
“This is a basic case of racial profiling: can Latin Americans be shaken in their communities and where they live because they look Latin?” Kevin R. Johnson, director of Aoki Center on Critical Race and Nation Studies at UC Davis Legal School, said on Thursday in response to the administration’s submission.
Starting in early June, highly armed agents, often in masks And ordinary military -style clothing or uniforms, aggressively retained immigrants and US citizens, using heavy military equipment at home landfills, car washes and Latin American markets in Los Angeles. Agents often filmed arrests and shared the videos on social media tuned to Hip -hop musicS The Trump administration has sworn to bring such actions to the cities across the country, especially in the blue countries.
Following the federal government’s complaint before the Supreme Court Refusing from the 9th Round Appeal Court last week To raise the temporary restraint order.
Numerous legal cases related to Trump’s immigration policies have already reached the Supreme Court, including the use of the Government of the Law on Alien enemies to deport Venezuelans accused of members of the gang. The Supreme Court overturned the temporary restrictive order of the lower court, which blocks these deportations. Many of the Supreme Court’s decisions, especially on immigration issues, have occurred in the administration in recent months.
“I think it is not surprising that if you have some victories in the courts through appeals, you are wearing appeals,” says Johnson, who notes that both Democrats and Republican administrations have used the appeal strategy.
Prior to the temporary restraining order, the border patrol sector Gregory BovinoThe leader of Operations in LA, made a military style raids through large layers of Los Angeles. Calmatters and Bellingcat maps over 100 seats on Raids, including 15 separate domestic landfills.
After the order of the lower court, he moved the operations north to the capital of the state.
“There is no sanctuary anywhere,” Bovino said after July 17 attack at a home depot in SacramentoS “We are here to stay. We are not going anywhere. We will influence this mission and secure the homeland.”
Frimpong’s restrictive order did not completely stop the implementation of immigration to Los Angeles.
On Wednesday, a highly armed border patrol and other federal agents hid in a Penske truck before popping up and planting people at a home depot in an operation called the Trojan Horse.
In a written statement, the Ministry of Interior Security said that border patrol agents had made a “directed raid” at the home depot, which “led to the arrests of 16 illegal aliens from Guatemala, Mexico, Honduras and Nicaragu.”
Johnson of UC Davis said at least the federal government is pursuing a legitimate path to continue its actions, but if the temporary restrictive order is canceled, it could cause “real damage” in the LA Community.
“These ditch patrols are terrifying communities,” Johnson said. “It will have an impact on whether people will take their children to school and whether people can take their children to the doctor.”
This article was Originally Published on CalMatters and was reissued under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Noderivatives License.