Trump administration ordered to halt indiscriminate immigration stops in California over racial profiling concerns | US immigration

A Federal Judge ordered the Trump administration to stop random immigrant stops and arrests in seven California districts, including Los Angeles.
Judge Maame E Frimpong on Friday, last week after a lawsuit was filed by the immigrant advocacy groups, prevented the use of what was called contrary to the constitution.
The case in the US Regional Court was accused of systematically targeting brown -skinned people in Southern California during the ongoing immigration pressure. The plaintiffs have three US citizens and two US citizens, despite the identity of the agents.
The order also applies to Ventura district on Thursday, where the bus loads of the workers were detained. The court trial led to conflicts with protesters and multiple injuries after the federal agents landed.
Frimpong also issued a separate order that prevented the Federal government from restricting the access of lawyers at a Los Angeles Immigration detention facility.
The judge issued an emergency orders, which was a temporary precaution while the case progresses, a hearing in which the advocacy groups claimed that the government had violated the fourth and fifth amendments of the Constitution.
In turn, he wrote that the federal government was a “evidence mountain ında in case of committing violations they were accused.
Lawyer Sean Skedzielewski, who represented the government, said that there was no evidence in the arrests of federal migratory agents and that they see the appearance as part of “the integrity of conditions”.
In some cases, he said that they operate in “targeted, individualized packages”.
Deputy Secretary of the Department of Interior Security Tricia McLaughlin wrote with a E -Posta that the allegations that individuals claim to be ‘targeted by law enforcement due to their skin color were disgusting and categorically wrong ”.
McLughlin, before the arrest, “Executive operations are highly targeted and officers show the necessary care,” he said.
Lawyers accuse the immigrant officials of detention according to their races, making arrests without guaranteed, and rejecting the access to the legal adviser at a holding facility in the city center of the prisoners.
According to the American Association of Civil Liberations, the latest wave of immigration is based on a “arbitrary arrest quota” and “wide stereotypes based on race or ethnic origin”.
Aclu lawyer Muhammad Tajsar said that Brian Gavidia, one of the US citizens who was detained, was “physically attacked… for some reason other than Latino and mainly working in a drawing garden in the Latin American neighborhood”.
The Emir of Friday will prevent the government from using only race or ethnic origin, talking to Spanish or English in a place of a drawing garden or car washing, or as a foundation of reasonable suspicion to stop someone’s profession.




