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
Illinois quick hits: Mine manager pleads guilty; Johnson issues food executive order
Op-Ed: Chicago-area transit needs an intervention, not another fix
WATCH: ‘Partisans’ who want to should ‘get up and move’ from Illinois, Pritzker says
Victims identified in Minneapolis Catholic school shooting
Pentagon to build new task force to counter drone threats
‘Horrendous’ religious freedom violation leads to payout by Chicago Public Schools
Extended Secret Service protection canceled for Kamala Harris
Du Quoin State Fair gets $50M as senator defends two state fairs in Illinois
WATCH: Pritzker alleges Trump election interference; tells disgruntled residents to move
Illinois quick hits: Foreign national indicted for fraud; Chicago Public Schools budget approved
Mokena Library Awarded Nearly $30,000 Grant from Illinois Secretary of State
CA Supreme Court rejects GOP bid to stop redistricting