
Judge grants temporary restraining orders restricting DHS immigration operations in SoCal
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Judge says DHS must stop race-based immigration arrests, granting temporary restraining orders
Judge says DHS must stop race-based immigration arrests, granting temporary restraining orders. Judge’s decision requires DHS to provide better access to legal counsel for detainees. Order also blocks agents from stopping individuals based on factors like their race or the language they speak. Orders stem from a lawsuit accusing federal immigration officials of carrying out “roving patrols” and detaining people without warrants and regardless of whether they have actual proof the detainees are in the country illegally.”I believe these events are unprecedented in American history,” plaintiffs’ attorney Mark Rosenbaum of the Public Counsel law firm told the court.. City and county officials from throughout Los Angeles County said Tuesday they are planning to join suit against U.S. Immigration and Border Protection agencies. The White House issued a statement Tuesday morning defending federal immigration activity, saying “the brave men and women of ICE are under siege by deranged Democrats — undeterred in their mission,” the White House said in a statement. The two main plaintiffs in the case said they were arrested by armed, masked agents merely for sitting at a bus stop.
The judge’s decision requires DHS to provide better access to legal counsel for detainees and blocks agents from stopping individuals based on factors like their race or the language they speak.
The judge’s decision requires DHS to provide better access to legal counsel for detainees and blocks agents from stopping individuals based on factors like their race or the language they speak.
The judge’s decision requires DHS to provide better access to legal counsel for detainees and blocks agents from stopping individuals based on factors like their race or the language they speak.
The judge’s decision requires DHS to provide better access to legal counsel for detainees and blocks agents from stopping individuals based on factors like their race or the language they speak.
LOS ANGELES (KABC) — A Los Angeles federal judge issued a pair of temporary restraining orders on Friday limiting the ability of U.S. immigration agents to detain people absent reasonable suspicion beyond merely their race, ethnicity or occupation, while also requiring that detainees be given access to legal counsel.
The orders stem from a lawsuit filed by Public Counsel and the American Civil Liberties Union accusing federal immigration officials of carrying out “roving patrols” and detaining people without warrants and regardless of whether they have actual proof the detainees are in the country illegally.
In a 52-page ruling issued early Friday evening, U.S. District Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong, an appointee of then-President Joe Biden, barred immigration agencies “from conducting detentive stops in this district unless the agent or officer has reasonable suspicion that the person to be stopped is within the United States in violation of U.S. immigration law.”
The order also bars agents from relying solely on factors such as race/ethnicity, speaking with an accent or being at locations such as bus stops, day laborer sites, car washes or agricultural sites as a basis for detaining people.
In a separate order, Frimpong ordered immigration agencies to ensure detainees are provided with access to attorneys or legal representatives seven days a week, and they must be provided with access to confidential telephone calls with attorneys at no charge to the detainees — and those calls “shall not be screened, recorded or otherwise monitored.”
During a court hearing Thursday, Sean Skedzielewski, a government attorney, denied allegations that agents were conducting illegal detentions of immigrants, insisting that Department of Homeland Security enforcement activities are based on proper evidence and the “totality of the circumstances.”
But Frimpong appeared critical of the government’s stance, saying she wanted to hear more specifics and fewer generalities.
In his argument, Mohammad Tajsar, senior staff attorney with the ACLU Foundation of Southern California, told the court that most immigration stops do not happen to white people.
“It’s happening with people who appear Latino,” he said, adding that the government’s roving immigration agents “are stopping people and asking questions later.”
Frimpong said it appears that “high-level government officials” seem to approve of the tactics.
Asked by the judge why it was necessary for agents to wear masks that hide their identities, Skedzielewski responded that government agents were trying to avoid being “doxed” if their identities were discovered.
“I believe these events are unprecedented in American history,” plaintiffs’ attorney Mark Rosenbaum of the Public Counsel law firm told the court, referring to the events of the last month when immigration raids across the region have prompted demonstrations and panic in Latino communities.
Attorneys representing Southern California residents, workers and advocacy groups filed suit July 2 in Los Angeles federal court against the federal government on behalf of people who allege they were unlawfully stopped or detained by federal agents. Plaintiffs contend they were stopped based only on their skin color or occupation as workers in jobs that traditionally largely hire immigrants.
The two main plaintiffs in the case said they were arrested by armed, masked agents merely for sitting at a bus stop.
City and county officials from throughout Los Angeles County said Tuesday they are planning to join the suit.
The lawsuit alleges federal agencies, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, have engaged in unconstitutional and unlawful immigration enforcement raids by targeting Angelenos based on their perceived race and ethnicity and also denying detainees constitutionally mandated due process.
The White House issued a statement Tuesday morning defending federal immigration activity.
“The brave men and women of ICE are under siege by deranged Democrats — but undeterred in their mission,” the White House said in a statement. “Every day, these heroes put their own lives on the line to get the worst of the worst — criminal illegal immigrant killers, rapists, gangbangers, and
other violent criminals — off our streets and out of our neighborhoods.”
DHS officials on social media have also denied allegations of illegal activities during enforcement operations.
“Claims that individuals have been targeted’ by law enforcement because of their skin color are disgusting and categorically FALSE. DHS enforcement operations are highly targeted, and officers do their due diligence,” according to DHS.
“ICE detention facilities have higher standards than most U.S. prisons that hold actual U.S. citizens,” DHS previously stated. “These types of smears are designed to demonize and villainize our brave ICE law enforcement. This garbage has directly led to a nearly 700 percent increase in the assaults on ICE law enforcement officers.”
The pair of temporary restraining orders was issued as Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass issued a new round of executive directives to help immigrant communities.
“We’ll be holding our breath on that decision and hoping that she does follow through and that the city has some relief, and I think it would be relief for everyone for there to be a temporary restraining order that we would hope, of course, would then become permanent and that the raids would stop,” Bass said before the decision came down on Friday.
With the stroke of a pen, Bass signed an executive order requiring all city departments to comply with L.A.’s sanctuary city ordinance, prohibiting the use of city resources and personnel in federal immigration enforcement. Among other things, the directive also mandates that each department deliver preparedness plans within two weeks to ensure no immigration activity occurs on city property.
“I just want to point out the irony for a minute that there is a need for a directive, that there is a need in our city to understand how to protect itself from the federal government,” Bass said. “Just let that sink in for a minute.”
Immigrant activists claim those detained by ICE are being held in overcrowded, dungeon-like, deplorable facilities without being given due process. Activists spoke out for immigrant rights on Friday morning at Placita Olvera in Downtown L.A.
“For the last 30 days, clergy across denominations and faith traditions have gathered each morning at Placita Olvera to offer worship, prayer, and presence,” said Dylan Littlefield. “We were one part of the broader summer of resistance, standing with our community partners in a sustained collective witness for justice, dignity, and care.”
City News Service contributed to this report.
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