Once Again, a Federal Judge Orders ICE To Stop Unlawful Warrantless Arrests
Another judge has ordered the Department of Homeland Security to follow federal law, even as the Trump administration argues it has broad authority to conduct warrantless immigration arrests.
On Wednesday, a federal judge in Oregon issued an order barring Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents from conducting warrantless arrests without first finding that an individual is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained in accordance with federal law.
The order stems from a lawsuit brought by the nonprofit law firm Innovation Law Lab, which accuses immigration enforcement agencies of engaging in a "detain first, justify later" pattern of practice that violates federal law. Under federal law, immigration agents may conduct a warrantless arrest only if the officer has both a "reason to believe" a person is violating an immigration law or regulation and is "likely to escape" before a warrant can be obtained. Critically, without both findings, an officer lacks the requisite probable cause to make a lawful arrest.
During a hearing earlier this week, U.S. District Judge Mustafa Kasubhai heard evidence of immigration agents conducting warrantless arrests without making such a determination. One plaintiff, Victor Cruz Gamez, a 56-year-old grandfather, testified that he was held in immigration detention for three weeks following his unlawful warrantless arrest, according to the Associated Press. Gamez told the court that he was arrested after being pulled over by immigration agents despite having a driver's license and a work permit, items that can be used as evidence that Gamez was not, in fact, "likely to escape" before a warrant could be obtained.
Whether an individual is likely to escape is usually determined by considering factors like whether the person's identity is known to the arresting officer, whether the person has previously evaded authorities, and any ties or lack thereof the person has to the community, including family and employment.
Following the hearing, Kasubhai issued a preliminary injunction barring immigration agents from conducting warrantless arrests "without a pre-arrest individualized determination…of probable cause that the person being arrested is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained." Similar orders have also been recently issued in Washington, D.C., and Colorado. Immigration agents were also found to be flouting federal law in Chicago, where a federal judge ordered the release of over 600 immigrant detainees who were unlawfully arrested without a warrant.
In response to the news of the order, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News that the "case really isn't really about arrest procedures or legal standards" and accused "open-borders groups and activist judges" of trying to stop President Donald Trump's mass deportation campaign. "It won't work. DHS conducts enforcement operations in line with the U.S. Constitution and all applicable federal laws without fear, favor, or prejudice and will continue to do so," McLaughlin said.
However, just last week, the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Todd Lyons, issued a memo with new guidance attempting to rewrite the agency's definition of "likely to escape," arguing that previous interpretations were "unreasoned" and "incorrect." Under this new interpretation, a person is "likely to escape" if "he or she is unlikely to be located at the scene of the encounter or another clearly identifiable location once an administrative warrant is obtained." Such an interpretation gives immigration agents more authority to arrest immigrants who have close ties to the community but who might leave the scene after an immigration stop.
Whether the government has the authority to hold someone in custody is a question of paramount importance to liberty. And although the Trump administration's attempt to rewrite federal law to suit its practices is alarming, at least for now, some courts are willing to uphold the rule of law.
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Please to post comments
Appeals courts have already said it isnt unlawful. Scotus has defended article 2 administrative courts from the INA.
But keep arguing from ignorance in support of activist inferior judges.
Cite?
Why would it change your view? They've been given to you multiple times.
I'll give you a hint. Eighth Circuit.
Fuck off commie scum.
You ignore cites and continue to same stupid discredited claims. You also never cite anything when challenged.
Face it, you’re just a stupid commie bitch.
§1357. Powers of immigration officers and employees
(a) Powers without warrant
Any officer or employee of the Service authorized under regulations prescribed by the Attorney General shall have power without warrant-
(1) to interrogate any alien or person believed to be an alien as to his right to be or to remain in the United States;
(2) to arrest any alien who in his presence or view is entering or attempting to enter the United States in violation of any law or regulation made in pursuance of law regulating the admission, exclusion, expulsion, or removal of aliens, or to arrest any alien in the United States, if he has reason to believe that the alien so arrested is in the United States in violation of any such law or regulation and is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained for his arrest, but the alien arrested shall be taken without unnecessary delay for examination before an officer of the Service having authority to examine aliens as to their right to enter or remain in the United States;...
I look forward to the commie scum’s response.
When a judge issues an order you don't agree with, most people ask the appellate court to stay the order and argue out the case there.
Of course, Trumpanzees never care about the little bullshit details they don't like, so do what you want! FUCK THAT ACTIVIST JUDGE!
TRUMP TRUMP TRUMP TRUMP TRUMP TRUMP TRUMP TRUMP
Did you come here just to cunt up the comments?
He wants to be the biggest leftist retard here.
No small feat.
Judges have issued 700 habeas petitions in Minneapolis so far this year.
It is not a serious judicial situation.
And lying Marxist Antifa cunts like you ignore every last instance of your activist judges getting overturned.
Whats trumps win rate at appellate and scotus retard?
The order is the living embodiment of the reductio ad absurdum that has repeatedly been pointed out about this.
Before arresting someone without a warrant officers must first find that the person is likely to escape before they get a warrant?
If only we had a term for the degree likelihood they have to find the person's escape before they arrest them without a warrant. Maybe something clearer than an indefinite clause. Longer than an uncomfortable pause, but not so long as it takes to satisfy impossible laws... I'm sure we can come up with something to bridge these unfathomable maws.
Does Trump's Republican Administration deny that Warren Gamaliel Harding was f... er... having intimate sexual contact with 12-year-old Nan Britten long before he got her pregnant as President?
Timely
And topical
Jeffsarc's dad escaped from the basement again.
Yeah Hank, I’m sure they have a lot to say about a possible scandal from over a hundred years ago. And what does this have to do with Comstock, or spoiler votes?
Gamez told the court that he was arrested after being pulled over by immigration agents despite having a driver's license and a work permit, items that can be used as evidence that Gamez was not, in fact, "likely to escape" before a warrant could be obtained.
What does "likely to escape" have to do with this case? If he had a work permit and a photo ID, he is legally in the US and cannot be detained by ICE. Something else must have triggered his detainment. Perhaps even something that didn't require them to assess the likelihood of escape.
Here is your clue: when you are relying on an irrelevant portion of an argument to prove some point, it tells me you don't know what the fuck you are writing about, Autumn.
Chicken and egg. Reductio ad absurdum. Original sin.
How do you prove that someone who came to this country illegally, possibly on forged documents and with no ties to the community isn't a flight risk? I certainly concede there are ways and they may apply in this case, but they aren't broadly applicable to the task and/or the problem.
Blackstone's Ratio is 10:1, but that's at trial, not arrest. Even at that, if you show up to a room or a job site full of illegal immigrants, arrest and detain 12 people, one mistakenly, you're out in front of Blackstone. But, IME, I've already exceeded the critical thinking abilities of around 60% of the people supporting this.
Show us the rulings of judges that aren't from places where we expect them to oppose the Trump Administration no matter what the law is.
As soon as you write 'a judge in Oregon' - everyone stopped reading.
Oh, it was in Oregon. I stopped reading at Aut
It's time to start arresting these insurgent judges.