Santa Fe New Mexican

Judge: Texas migrant law is a ‘nightmare’

No ruling on measure that lets police arrest illegal border crossers

- By Acacia Coronado

AUSTIN, Texas — A federal judge on Thursday voiced concerns over a Texas law that would give police broad authority to arrest migrants on charges of illegal entry starting in March, saying it would be a “nightmare” if the U.S. became a patchwork of states enforcing different immigratio­n laws.

“That turns us from the United States of America into a confederat­ion of states,” said U.S. District Judge David Ezra, who did not immediatel­y issue a ruling. “That is the same thing the Civil War said you can’t do.”

Ezra is considerin­g a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Justice Department in what is the first legal test of what opponents have called the most dramatic attempt by a state to police immigratio­n since a 2010 Arizona law was partially struck down by the Supreme Court.

It is among several courtroom battles Texas is fighting with President Joe Biden’s administra­tion over how far the state can go to try to prevent migrants from crossing the border.

The judge remained skeptical during the nearly three-hour hearing in Austin, often sharply questionin­g the lawyers defending the law that was signed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.

Ezra, who was appointed by former President Ronald Reagan, did not say exactly when he would rule but said he hoped to give enough time for any appeals before the law takes effect March 5.

The measure would allow any Texas law enforcemen­t officer to arrest people who are suspected of entering the country illegally. Once in custody, they could either agree to a Texas judge’s order to leave the U.S. or be prosecuted on a misdemeano­r charge of illegal entry. Migrants who don’t leave could be arrested again and charged with a more serious felony.

Ezra noted he has experience hearing cases that deal with border issues and is familiar with the concerns raised by Abbott and other state officials over illegal crossings. But he said he was “not buying into” the argument only criminals are coming across the border, calling the “vast majority” of the migrants who enter the U.S. without permission otherwise law-abiding people.

He also questioned whether empowering local judges to remove people from the U.S. could interfere with federal processes or protection­s.

The state pointed to declaratio­ns by police officials who would enforce the law. Ezra responded: “I have to rule on what the law says, not what they say they will or won’t do.”

Ezra became frustrated during an exchange with an attorney for the state who said people with pending asylum cases who were arrested under the law would not be removed from the country, per their federal protection­s.

“You just go to jail?” Ezra asked.

“Yes,” replied Ryan Walters, chief of the Texas Attorney General’s Office special litigation­s division, moments after saying there is “no safer place” than a state prison for a migrant to await an immigratio­n court case.

For months, tensions have escalated between the Biden administra­tion and Texas over who can patrol the border and how. The Justice Department also has taken Texas to court over a floating barrier in the Rio Grande and defended the ability of U.S. Border Patrol agents to cut through and remove miles of razor wire that the state has installed along the border.

Republican governors across the U.S. have backed Abbott’s efforts. A heavy presence of Texas National Guard members in the border city of Eagle Pass has denied Border Patrol agents access to a riverfront park.

 ?? VALERIE GONZALEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signs three bills into law at a border wall constructi­on site Dec. 18 in Brownsvill­e, Texas. A federal judge questioned a law that gives police broad authority to arrest migrants on charges of illegal entry.
VALERIE GONZALEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signs three bills into law at a border wall constructi­on site Dec. 18 in Brownsvill­e, Texas. A federal judge questioned a law that gives police broad authority to arrest migrants on charges of illegal entry.

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