Washington – On Monday, the Supreme Court wiped the federal agents for comprehensive migration operations in Los Angeles, the latest victory for the administration of President Donald Trump in the Supreme Court.
The judges raised a restriction from a judge who found that “rooted patrols” were conducting random arrests in Los Angeles. This matter prevented agents from preventing people only based on their race, language, job, or location.
Trump’s Republican Administration argued that the matter is incorrectly registered by the agents through a large -scale campaign on illegal immigration.
The American boycott judge Maame E. Frimpong found in Los Angeles a “mountain of evidence” that enforcement tactics violate the constitution. Among the prosecutors were American citizens at immigration stations. The Court of Appeal had left Fribong’s ruling in his place.
The Supreme Court Resolution 6-3 comes at a time when the enforcement of immigration and customs also increases in Washington amid Trump’s unprecedented seizure of law enforcement in the capital and the deployment of the National Guard.
President Donald Trump speaks in a hearing about the Religious Freedom Committee at the Bible Museum, on Monday, September 8, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
The lawsuit will now continue to detect in California. It was presented by the immigrant calling groups that accused the Trump administration of targeting people with brown skin systematically during his management campaign on illegal immigration in the Los Angeles region.
Lawyers of the Ministry of Internal Security said that immigration officers are targeting people on the basis of illegal presence in the United States, not skin color, sweat or race. However, the Ministry of Justice argued that it was wrongly restricting the factors that ICE agents could use when specifying who stops.
The Los Angeles region was a battlefield for the Trump administration after it stimulated the strategic immigration strategy and the deployment of the National Guard and the Maritime Event. It seems that the number of immigration raids in the Los Angeles region slows down shortly after the decrease in the fridge command in July, but recently they have become more frequently again, including the process in which the agents jumped from the back of a rented box truck and performed arrests in the Los Angeles Home Debot Store.
Prosecutors argued that her matter prevents federal agents only from stopping reasonably, which is in line with the constitution and the precedent of the Supreme Court.
The prosecutors ‘lawyers wrote, “Many American citizens and others who are present in this country have been severely disturbed by their freedom,” the prosecutors’ attorneys wrote. “Many have been physically wounded; at least two were moved to a contract facility.”
The Trump administration said it was very restricted, “The threat of the agents with penalties if the court disbelieves that they relied on additional factors to take any specific stopping.”
Attorney De John Sour also argued that the matter could not stand under the recent Supreme Court decision that restricts comprehensive orders, although the prosecutors do not agree.
The order issued by Frimpong, which was nominated by the Democratic President Joe Biden, from the prohibited authorities from the use of factors such as sweat or ethnicity, or Spanish or English speaking with a accent, or having a location such as a clouds or car wash, or occupying someone as the only basis for the reasonable subscription to capture. Its covers/its population covers about 20 million people, approximately half of them know that they are of Spanish/Latin origin.
Among the prosecutors were three detainees and two American citizens. One of the citizens of Brian Gavidia, a resident of Los Angeles, who was shown in a video on June 13, was seized by federal agents screaming, “I was born here in the states. East Los Angeles, his brothers!”
Gavidia was released about 20 minutes after the agents showed his identity, and another citizen stopped when washing cars, according to the case.
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The Associated Press Jimmy Deng writer in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
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