Federal Court Blocks the LA -Immigration -Trump -Administration’s raids

A federal court has temporarily blocked the Trump government by performing random immigration enforcement attacks in Los Angeles to maintain people exclusively on race, ethnicity, spoken language, language and other factors.
US District Judge Mame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong has submitted the request for a temporarily limiting order submitted by a number of recent prisoners and various immigrant rights and organizations for legal assistance. The judge has established a new hearing before July 16 in the case that includes the Ministry of the Interior, immigration and customs enforcement and American customs and border protection. The claimants are the ACLU of South California, the Coalition for Human Immigrant Rights, United Farm Workers, Immigrant Defenders Law Center and three Pasadena men who were arrested on June 18 while they were waiting at a bus stop: Pedro Pendomo, Carlos Osorto and Isaac Molina.
The decision of 52 pages released by Frimpong on Friday evening comes after weeks of media attention for shocking scenes of militarist law enforcement actions that unfold in South California. Frimpong explains the four legal core issues with a clarity in clarity in the list of the form of the decision.
“Is it illegal to perform roaming patrols that identify people on the basis of race alone, ask them aggressively and then hold them without an order, without their permission, and without reasonable suspicion that they are without status? Yes, it is,” the judge wrote.
Since the Blitz of the Department of Homeland Security and other federal agencies started on 6 June, local points of sale have been in the second largest media market in the country full of sculptures of masked, non-geidified federal agents who are working places, stores for home and other stores and other institutions and a large number of other institutions. Local TV news broadcasts are full of residents who told heartbreaking stories about neighbors, friends, employees, Gardners, retail operators, childcare providers and many others suddenly disappear without information.
“The wandering of patrols without reasonable suspicion violates the fourth amendment to the Constitution and denies that prisoners violates the fifth amendment,” wrote Frimpong.
The judge also ordered federal officials to give prisoners eight hours a day, four hours a day at the weekend, eight hours a day access to legal advice. The ruling also orders them to enable detainees to make confidential phone calls with lawyers and other legal representatives for free.
Mayor Karen Bass, Los Angeles, raised the issue of federal raids on July 7 when she intervened while the federal agents delivered a massive show for TV in La’s Macarthur Park, which by sweeping with mounted offices and tank -like vehicles. The mayor’s arrival on the scene effectively stopped the activity. The first few weeks after the raids started, the center of Los Angeles and other places broke out with protest activity and sporadic violence.
Frimpong’s prevailing details The harsh conditions for prisoners in the basement of the federal facility at 300 N. Los Angeles Avenue, or “B-18” as described in the pronunciation. From June 20, more than 300 people will be held in tight and unsanitary conditions, without food and fresh water for long pieces, Frimpong wrote.
The rule of the court determines the case why the Trump governance enforcement policy has violated the Constitution. De heersende verboden ijs, DHS en andere agenices om een “redelijk” verdenking te vormen voor het vasthouden van iemand als dat vermoeden slechts gebaseerd is op een of meer van de vier factoren, schreef Frimpong: “Blijkbare race of etniciteit, spaans of sprekend Engels met een accent; aanwezigheid op een bepaalde locatie (bijv. Bus Stop, sleepstop, sleepstop, sleepstop, dagleverancier, agrarische site etc. does the type of work.




