Judge orders Trump administration to halt indiscriminate immigration stops, arrests in California

Los Angeles (AP) – A federal judge on Friday ordered the Trump administration to stop random migration and arrests in seven provinces in California, including Los Angeles.

The migratory calling groups filed the lawsuit last week, accusing the administration of President Donald Trump of targeting brown skin in southern California during the ongoing immigration campaign. Among the prosecutors are three detained immigrants and two American citizens, who were detained, although the agents were identified.

Requesting a deposit in the American boycott court from the judge to prevent the administration from using what they call non -constitutional tactics in immigration raids. Immigrant defenders accuse immigration officials of detaining a person based on their race, and they are arrested unjustified, and to deny the detainees to reach the legal advisor in a contract of contract in the center of Los Angeles.

Judge Maame E. Frimpong also issued a separate command that prevents the federal government from restricting the arrival of the lawyer in the immigration detention facility in Los Angeles.

Frimpong issued emergency orders, which are a temporary action during the continuation of the lawsuit, on the day after a hearing in which the calling groups argued that the government violates the fourth and fifth amendments to the constitution.

I wrote in order that there was a “mountain of evidence” in the event that the federal government is committing the violations they accused.

The White House quickly responded to the ruling late Friday.

“There is no federal judge who has the authority to dictate the immigration policy – that power falls with Congress and the president,” said Appiel Jackson spokesman. “Enforcement operations require careful planning and implementation; skills that exceeded the jurisdiction (or) the jurisdiction of any judge. We expect that this total defeat of the judicial authority will be corrected upon appeal.”

Latin immigrants and communities throughout Southern California have been ready for weeks since the Trump administration climbed the arrests of car wash, car parking at home, immigration courts and a group of companies. Tens of thousands of people participated in the gatherings in the region about the raids and the subsequent publication of the National Guard and the Marine Corps.

It also applies to Ventura province, where buses of workers were arrested on Thursday while the court session was underway after the federal agents descended on a hemp farm, which led to a clash with the demonstrators and multiple injuries.

According to the American Civil Liberties Union, the last wave of migration enforcement was driven by the “arbitrary detention share” and based on “extensive stereotypes based on race or race.”

When they detained the three workers who were prosecutors in the lawsuit, all immigration agents knew them was that they were Latin and that they were wearing business clothes, according to the lawsuit. He goes on describing the raids in Meets Meets and Home DOEPS where the witnesses say that federal agents grabbed anyone “seemed of Spanish origin.”

“Any allegations that individuals” have been targeted “by enforcement due to the color of their skin are disgusting and categorically wrong.”

“Enforcement operations are very targeted, and the officers calm the duty,” McLeulin said.

After the ruling, she said, “The province’s judge undermines the will of the American people.”

ACLU’s lawyer Mohamed Tagsar said that Brian Gavidia, one of the arrested American citizens, said, “They were physically attacked … without any other reason other than Latin and worked in the clouds arena in the Latin American neighborhood mostly.”

Tagsar asked why Immigration agents detained everyone in car wash except for two white workers, according to an announcement by a car washing worker, if the race is not involved.

Representative of the government, lawyer Sean Squadeseliuski said that there is no evidence that federal immigration agents consider a race in their arrest, and that they only consider the appearance as part of the “totality of conditions” including previous monitoring and interactions with people in this field.

In some cases, they also operated “targeted and individual beams.”

“The Ministry of Internal Security has politics and training to ensure compliance with the fourth amendment,” said Skidseliuski.

It opens up a lawyer for lawyers

Lawyers of the Center for Immigrant Defender and other groups say they have also been rejected from reaching an emigration and customs facility in the United States in the center of Los Angeles known as “B-18” on several occasions since June, according to court documents.

“They tried to scream basic rights” in a bus of people detained by immigration agents in downtown Los Angeles when government drivers fell their centuries to dump them and chemical munitions that resemble tear gas were deployed.

Skidseliuski said that arrival was only limited to “protecting employees and detainees” during violent protests and since then it was restored.

Rosnabum said that lawyers were prevented from reaching even in days without any nearby demonstrations, and that the detained people are also not given enough access to phones or informed that lawyers were available to them.

He said that the facility lacks food and the sufficient family, which was “forcibly” called to carry people to sign papers to agree to leave the country before consulting a lawyer.

On Friday, the government will prevent the government from using the apparent sweat or sweat only, or to speak Spanish or English with a accent, or a location such as a clouds yard or car wash, or occupy someone as a basis for reasonable suspicion to stop someone. It will also require officials to open the B-18 to visit the lawyers for seven days a week and provide detainees by accessing secret phone calls with lawyers.

The Prosecutor also submitted to 18 democratic countries to support orders.

Customs agents and American border protection were already prevented from conducting unjustified arrests in a large group of eastern California after a federal judge issued a preliminary order in April.

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