Supreme Court allows ICE to factor race, workplace into L.A. raids
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday to temporarily allow U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to use race, native language and place of work to partly justify immigration raids.
The court’s conservative majority granted the administration’s emergency application for a stay on a lower court’s decision, with its three liberal justices dissenting. Though the order was reportedly brief and unsigned, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote a concurring opinion.
“Immigration officers ‘may briefly detain’ an individual ‘for questioning’ if they have ‘a reasonable suspicion, based on specific articulable facts, that the person being questioned … is an alien illegally in the United States,’” Kavanaugh wrote. “The reasonable suspicion inquiry turns on the ‘totality of the particular circumstances.’”
Kavanaugh was responding to U.S. District Judge Maame Frimpong’s order that prohibited ICE officials from using several factors to form reasonable suspicion.
“Defendants may not rely solely on the factors … alone or in combination of” a person’s race or ethnicity, their spoken language or accent, their place of work or their location, according to Frimpong.
While the administration cannot base an immigration stop on someone’s race alone, Kavanaugh said it could, along with other factors, provide a reasonable suspicion, especially since the legal bar for reasonable suspicion is lower than it is for probable cause.
“Reasonable suspicion is a lesser requirement than probable cause and ‘considerably short’ of the preponderance of the evidence standard,” Kavanaugh continued.
The case is currently before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Latest News Stories
Meeting Briefs: Mokena Village Board for June 23, 2025
Mokena 159 Board Approves Amended Budget Amid Transparency, Deficit Concerns
Mokena 159 Board Signals Support for Recording Meetings After Public Push
District 159 Adopts ‘Wayfinder’ Program to Boost Middle Schoolers’ Social-Emotional Health
Mokena 159 Principals Report End-of-Year Academic Progress, Focus on Writing
Meeting Briefs: Mokena School District 159 for June 18, 2025
Will County Board Halts Transportation Plan After Contentious 143rd Street Debate
Will County Board Upholds Zoning Denials, Rejecting Developer Appeals
Split Vote Halts Monee Truck Terminal Project
Future Quarry Fight Looms as Board Approves ‘Tequila Barrel’ Retreat
News Briefs from the Will County Board June 18 Meeting
Frankfort Approves Outdoor Patios for The Loft and Grounded Coffee Bar, Waives All Parking Requirements