Supreme Court, Trump administration and immigration
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4don MSN
Supreme Court lifts restrictions on LA immigration stops set after agents swept up US citizens
The Supreme Court is clearing the way for federal agents to conduct sweeping immigration operations in Los Angeles, another victory for President Donald Trump at the high court.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday overturned a lower court's rulings blocking federal immigration officials from conducting raids in California seen by critics as unconstitutional racial profiling.
The Supreme Court lifted restrictions against aggressive immigration enforcement tactics by federal agents in central California that had been challenged by critics.
Nick Brown, who has sued the Trump administration 37 times, called the ruling allowing race as a factor in immigration stops a "shameful decision."
The high court overturned a California judge’s ruling that ICE agents can’t detain people based on ethnicity, job site or language spoken.
By a 6-3 vote, the justices set aside a Los Angeles judge's temporary restraining order that barred agents from stopping people based in part on their race or apparent ethnicity.
President Trump has been on the winning side of several emergency rulings by the Supreme Court, who have often failed to provide any reason for siding with him. University of Michigan Law School Assistant Law Professor Leah Litman joins Alex Witt to explain some of these rulings,
The Supreme Court has been forced, once again, to step in and overturn an injunction issued by a Biden-appointed lower-court judge, this time in Los Angeles, where open-borders activists sought to ban virtually all immigration enforcement in Southern California.
Ferrera told "The View" she thanks "God for Justice Sonia Sotomayor," whose dissent to a Supreme Court ruling noted a potential impact on "anyone who looks Latino."
Justice Amy Coney Barrett touted her new memoir, 'Listening to the Law,' to a crowd of supporters at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley on Tuesday.