Supreme Court blocks Florida from enforcing law targeting illegal immigrants – Washington Examiner

The U.S. Supreme Court declined Florida’s emergency request to enforce a law banning illegal immigrants from entering the state, leaving a lower court’s injunction in place. The law, Senate Bill 4C, signed by Governor Ron DeSantis, would have made it a felony for illegal immigrants who were deported or denied entry to re-enter Florida. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier sought immediate Supreme Court intervention to allow enforcement, arguing the state is hindered in addressing illegal immigration. The law is supported by 18 states and backed by the Justice Department, which argues it aligns with federal immigration law. However, opponents like the ACLU claim the law disrupts federal authority and creates a elaborate patchwork of state immigration regulations. The legal battle continues as the appeals court has also refused to lift the injunction.


Supreme Court blocks Florida from enforcing law targeting illegal immigrants

The Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected Florida‘s emergency request to allow the state to enforce a law that would ban illegal immigrants from entering the state.

The decision leaves a lower court’s ruling in place. The Supreme Court did not explain its decision, and no dissents were filed.

Senate Bill 4C, approved by Florida’s legislature and signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) earlier this year, makes it a crime for illegal immigrants to enter the state if they had been deported or previously denied entry into the United States, regardless of their history or if they had become lawful residents.

Re-entering the state after being deported would have been deemed a felony. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier asked the Supreme Court to intervene last month and allow law enforcement. He said the state and its citizens will “remain disabled from combating the serious harms of illegal immigration for years as this litigation proceeds through the lower courts,” without intervention.

But the Supreme Court is leaving U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams’s preliminary injunction in place while a legal battle on the law continues.

Florida’s position is supported by 18 states, which have submitted an amicus brief backing the immigration law. The ACLU has filed a motion opposing the law, saying it would undermine federal immigration enforcement and “lead to an unmanageable patchwork of varying state criminal regulations of immigration.”

FLORIDA LEADS STATES IN CARRYING OUT TRUMP’S IMMIGRATION MISSION

The Justice Department has also filed a 33-page amicus brief backing Florida in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. The Trump administration said the law does not “preempt” federal supremacy over immigration law, and that Florida’s S.B. 4C “is in harmony, not conflict, with federal law.”

However, the appeals court declined to pause the injunction. The ACLU said in a court filing that several other states have tried to pass similar legislation, but all remain blocked in the courts.



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