
On Tuesday, the US Ministry published a new list of 35 “shrines” and focuses on states and cities that limit cooperation with the Federal immigration authorities.
The list is named 12 states, including California, New York and Illinois, Plus Washington DC, 4 regions and 19 cities such as Philadelphia, Chicago and Boston. This replaces a much larger list of May, which included more than 500 seats, but was pulled out after only three days due to errors and protests from incorrect areas.
The Pam Bondi Prosecutor General warned these policies “to prevent the enforcement of law and endanger US citizens,” he promised to continue the court proceedings against them. This step follows after the April order of President Trump, who intervened on resistance to deporting efforts.
Jurisdiction of the shrine will obtain a label by limiting us with the immigration and enforcement of customs outputs (ICE), such as rejecting requests for retention of prison, limiting sharing information about immigration status detainees or using local resources to help immigrants.
For example, Philadelphia and Montgomery County only honor the arrest of the ice with the judge’s order and argue that they hold people illegally by litigation. The List of the DO focuses on nine specific “resistance” factors, including training, to avoid ICE cooperation and the creation of offices that help immigrants avoid federal agents.
Bondi’s approach is more accurate than the former Homeland Security list, including even rural districts supported by Trump, which are called “sleepless”.
Despite the threats, they face legal roadblocks. The federal judge in Illinois recently threw a lawsuit against Chicago and decided that 10. The amendment allows cities to refuse to enforce federal immigration laws.
“If the state cannot check whether their employees share information, they cannot log out positively,” wrote Judge Lindsay Jenkins, named Biden. The administration sued New York City, Los Angeles, Denver, Rochester and four New Jersey Cities since April.
Meanwhile, some areas like Louisville and North Carolina have turned the sanctuary policy, while Florida and Texas are now pushing local agencies to help ice.
Local leaders were pushing back strongly. Philadelphia officials insist that they have received “no formal announcements” of violations and are “self -confidence” that they are governed by the Federal law. The mayor of Cherelle Parker avoids the term “Sanctuary” and is called a “welcome city”, a shift from the confrontational style of its predecessor.
Three Pennsylvania districts near Philly celebrated their removal from the list, while the Republican Commissioner Chester County called evidence that “respecting the rule of law”.
With endangered cuts, but the court challenges assembly, fights federal objectives of deportation against local demands on security and constitutional rights.
(Tagstotranslate) shrine jurisdiction