Choose orders the Trump administration to cease indiscriminately immigration stops, arrests in California

A federal judge instructed the Trump government on Friday to stop indiscriminately immigration stops in seven California counties, including Los Angeles.

Immigers' interest groups submitted the lawsuit last week, in which President Donald Trump's administration was accused of systematically aimed at brown-skinned people in South California during their ongoing immigration distance. The plaintiffs include three detained immigrants and two US citizens who were recorded, even though they showed agents their identification.

Registration with the US district court asked a judge to prevent the administration from using unconstitutional tactics in immigration attacks. Proponents of immigrants accuse immigration officers of capturing someone because of their breed, without holding on to arrest warrants, and refusing the access of the prisoners in a holding facility in downtown LA.

Tricia McLaughlin, deputy secretary of the US Ministry of Homeland, said in an e -mail that “all claims that individuals of law enforcement agencies were” targeted “because of their skin tone are disgusting and categorical.”

McLaughlin said “enforcement processes are heavily attacked and the officials make their due diligence” before they make arrests.

Judge Maame E. Frimpong also granted a separate arrangement that limited the federal government from the restriction of access to an immigration finding facility in Los Angeles in Los Angeles.

Frimpong issued the emergency commands that are a temporary measure, while the lawsuit the day after a hearing in which Advocacy groups argued that the government violated the fourth and fifth change in the constitution.

In the order, she wrote that a “mountain of evidence” was presented in the case that the federal government had committed the violations of which they were accused.

Immigrants and Latino communities across Southern California have been on the sidelines of the Trump administration on car facilities, parking spaces for home depot, immigration courts and a number of companies for weeks. Tens of thousands of people participated in the raids in the region and the subsequent use of the National Guard and the Marines in the rallies.

The command also applies to Ventura County, where the bus loads of employees were arrested on Thursday, while the trial was underway after federal agents were relegated to a cannabis farm, which led to collapse with demonstrators and several injuries.

According to the American Civil Liberties Union, the recent wave of immigration treatment was driven by an “arbitrary arrest rate” and based on “wide stereotypes based on breed or ethnic belonging”.

In the detention of the three -day workers who are in the complaint, all immigration officers knew that they were Latino and were dressed in construction, according to the lawsuit. It continues to describe raids at exchange meetings and home deposits, in which witnesses say that federal agents have gripped everyone who “looked Hispanic”.

The lawyer of ACLU, Mohammad Tajsar, said Brian Gavidia, one of the US citizens who were detained, was “physically attacked … for no other reason than he was Latin American and worked in a predominantly Latin American quarter.”

Tajsar asked why immigration officers had all arrested in a car washing with the exception of two white workers, as can be seen from an explanation of a car worker if races were not involved.

The lawyer Sean Skedzielewski represented the government that there was no evidence that the federal immigration agents considered breed in their arrests and that they were only considered as part of the “totality of circumstances”, including previous surveillance and interactions with people in the field.

In some cases, they also operated “targeted, individual packages,” he said.

“The Department of Homeland Security has politics and training to ensure compliance with the fourth change,” said Skedzielewski.

The order opens the facility for visits to lawyers

Law Centers' lawyers and other groups state that they have been aware of the access to a US immigration and customs authority in the city center of LA several times since June.

In an incident on June 7, lawyer Mark Rosenbaum said that lawyers “tried out” fundamental rights “when the people stained in the city center of LA were imprisoned in a bus when the government drivers were honking their horns to exhaust them and chemical ammunitions, which were resembled with tears.

Skedzielewski said that access was limited to protect the employees and the prisoners in violent protests, and it has been restored since then.

Rosenbaum said that the lawyers were denied access even on days without demonstrations nearby and that the detained people were not given sufficient access to phones or were informed that lawyers were available to them.

He said that the facility lacks enough food and beds, which he called “compulsion” to get people to sign papers to leave the country before consulting a lawyer.

The arrangement on Friday prevents the government from using only an apparent breed or ethnicity, Spanish or English with accent, presence in one place such as a towing or car wash or the employment of someone as the basis for reasonable suspicion of stopping someone, or as a basis for a reasonable suspicion. Seven days a week, the B-18 officials also open the visit of lawyers of lawyers and enable prisoners to access confidential telephone calls with lawyers.

The Attorney General for 18 Democratic States also submitted investigations to support the commands.

The US customs and border protection activities were already able to set arrest prison in a large part of the East California after a federal judge issued an injunction in April.

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