Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Order puts law allowing police to arrest migrants back on hold

- By Lindsay Whitehurst

A federal appeals court late Tuesday issued an order that again prevents Texas from arresting migrants suspected of entering the U.S. illegally, hours after the Supreme Court allowed the strict new immigratio­n law to take effect.

The decision by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals comes weeks after a panel on the same court cleared the way for Texas to enforce the law by putting a pause on a lower judge's injunction.

But by a 2-1 order, a panel of the appeals court lifted that pause ahead of arguments before the court on Wednesday.

Texas authoritie­s had not announced any arrests made under the law.

Earlier Tuesday a divided Supreme Court had allowed Texas to begin enforcing a law that gives police broad powers to arrest migrants suspected of crossing the border illegally as the legal battle over the measure played out.

The conservati­ve majority order rejected an emergency applicatio­n from the Biden administra­tion, which says the law is a clear violation of federal authority that would cause chaos in immigratio­n law.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott had praised the order clearing the way for the law that allows any police officer in Texas to arrest migrants for illegal entry and authorizes judges to order them to leave the U.S.

The high court didn't address whether the law is constituti­onal. The measure was sent to the appellate court, which made the late Tuesday ruling.

It was also unclear where any migrants ordered to leave might go if the law is ultimately allowed. It calls for them to be sent to ports of entry along the U.S.-Mexico border, even if they are not Mexican citizens.

But Mexico's government said Tuesday it would not “under any circumstan­ces” accept the return of any migrants to its territory from the state of Texas. Mexico is not required to accept deportatio­ns of anyone except Mexican citizens.

The Department of Homeland Security said the federal government would also continue the court challenge to the law that will “further complicate” the job of its “already strained” workforce. The agency won't assist in any efforts to enforce the law known as Senate Bill 4.

The Supreme Court's majority did not write a detailed opinion in the case, as is typical in emergency appeals. But the decision to let the law go into effect drew dissents from liberal justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor.

“The Court gives a green light to a law that will upend the longstandi­ng federal-state balance of power and sow chaos,” Sotomayor wrote in a blistering dissent joined by Jackson.

The law is considered by opponents to be the most dramatic attempt by a state to police immigratio­n since an Arizona law more than a decade ago, portions of which were struck down by the Supreme

Court. Critics have also said the Texas law could lead to civil rights violations and racial profiling.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called the law “harmful and unconstitu­tional” and said it would burden law enforcemen­t while creating confusion. She called on congressio­nal Republican­s to settle the issue with a federal border security bill.

Texas, for its part, has argued it has a right to take action over what authoritie­s have called an ongoing crisis at the southern border. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice said in a statement it is “prepared to handle any influx” in the state's detainee population associated with the state law.

Sheriffs' offices have been preparing for the implementa­tion of Senate Bill 4 since the state's legislativ­e session last year, said Skylor Hearn, executive director of the Sheriffs' Associatio­n of Texas.

The law allows police in counties bordering Mexico to make arrests if they see someone crossing illegally, he said. It could also be enforced elsewhere in Texas if someone is arrested on suspicion of another violation and a fingerprin­t taken during jail booking links them to a suspected re-entry violation. It likely would not come into play during a routine traffic stop, he said.

“I don't think you will see anything ultimately different,” Hearn said.

Arrests for illegal crossings along the southern border hit record highs in December but fell by half in January, a shift attributed to seasonal declines and heightened enforcemen­t. The federal government has not yet released numbers for February.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants are processed by border agents in Eagle Pass, Texas, last year.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants are processed by border agents in Eagle Pass, Texas, last year.

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