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Weakened Arizona immigrant rules still draw protests

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1 of 34. A demonstrator is arrested during a protest against Arizona's controversial Senate Bill 1070 immigration law outside Sheriff Joe Arpaio's office in Phoenix July 29, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Joshua Lott

PHOENIX | Thu Jul 29, 2010 5:47pm EDT

PHOENIX (Reuters) - Arizona on Thursday appealed a judge's decision to block key parts of the state's crackdown on illegal immigrants and police in Phoenix arrested scores of activists protesting the remaining measures in the law.

Lawyers for Governor Jan Brewer and Arizona asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to lift an injunction blocking the most intrusive parts of the law, known as SB 1070, and asked for the appeal to be handled quickly.

Tensions over the law have inflamed a national debate over immigration, which has festered for decades and promises to play into the elections in November, when President Barack Obama's Democrats are fighting to retain control of Congress.

U.S. District Court judge Susan Bolton on Wednesday blocked the law's most controversial elements arguing that immigration matters are the federal government's responsibility.

The law had drawn wide popular support in this state bordering Mexico and across the United States as a whole, but was opposed by President Barack Obama and human rights groups.

Brewer issued a statement saying she had filed the appeal, asking that the suspended provisions "go into effect pending a decision on the merits of this case." The case was widely expected to go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Republican-controlled state legislature passed the law three months ago to try to drive nearly half a million illegal immigrants out of Arizona, and stem the flow of human and drug smugglers over the border from Mexico.

Several hundred Hispanic and labor activists, delighted by Wednesday's last minute ruling, pushed ahead with rallies in central Phoenix, chanting and banging drums in protest at parts of the law that came into effect on Thursday.

ARRESTED AT PROTEST

Police arrested at least 45 protesters after they blocked streets near a sheriff's office in the city center and the entrance to a jail.

A Reuters witness saw police dressed in riot gear arrest demonstrators, including an elderly woman church minister. The protesters offered no resistance and police led them away in plastic handcuffs.

"We welcome the fact that the judge blocked some of the provisions in SB 1070 but ... we are continuing action to overturn the rest of the law, " said Pablo Alvarado, executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network.

"Today is going to be worse that yesterday because there will be more laws on the books, more tools for cops," he said.

Blocked provisions included one requiring a police officer to check the immigration status of anyone stopped or detained if the officer believed they were not in the country legally.

Immigrants would also have been required to carry their documents at all times and undocumented workers would have been forbidden to solicit work in public.

Measures not subject to the stay, and which went into effect on Thursday, included offenses making it illegal for drivers to pick up day laborers from the street and to transport or harbor an illegal immigrant.

COPYCAT LAWS

The law triggered interest in copycat measures in as many as 20 other states around the country. But analysts said Bolton's ruling on Wednesday would "at least hit the pause button" for some Republicans mulling their own measures..

"If the Supreme Court upholds the injunction that will most likely put a real damper on any potential legislation," said Mark Jones, a political scientist at Rice University in Texas.

The law is popular with a majority of Americans and 65 percent of Arizona voters, although opponents charge it is unconstitutional and would lead to discrimination against Latinos, and Latino-looking Americans.

Scores of day laborers set out to seek work at informal day labor sites in Phoenix, despite the new provisions.

"We're not criminals, we're not hurting anyone ... We wish people would know that," said Franco Escamilla, an undocumented laborer from Mexico said as he waited outside a Home Depot store in Phoenix.

A sheriff known for his tough approach to illegal immigrants in the Phoenix area, pushed ahead with a crime and immigration sweep in as planned on Thursday.

"Nothing is going to deter the sheriff and my office, including rulings of a federal judge," Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio said. "It's business as normal."

About 10 protesters were arrested in Los Angeles after they chained themselves together in the middle of a busy intersection during a demonstration over the Arizona law that drew about 200 people.

(Writing by Tim Gaynor; Additional reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix, Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles and Jeremy Pelofsky in Washington; Editing by David Storey)

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Comments (82)
AskHarris wrote:
Following the thinking of this judge and the US Attorney, we citizens of the United States should no longer be required to carry our driver’s licenses while driving. If the government will not require legal or illegal aliens to carry identification, then how can the government reasonably require that of citizens?

Jul 28, 2010 12:12am EDT  --  Report as abuse
sadsolidier wrote:
“The number of requests that will emanate from Arizona as a result of determining the status of every arrestee is likely to impermissibly burden federal resources and redirect federal agencies away from the priorities they have established,”

Apparently doing what is right depends on how hard it is to do. Thank god our Service Members don’t have this same point of view.

Jul 28, 2010 12:29am EDT  --  Report as abuse
Primoswife wrote:
Today the Federal Court “shot Down” part of Arizona’s new State Immigration law. The part that the Feds say is “profiling”. Do not make me laugh. OK If a police officers pulls over a car and makes the observation that my eyes tend to floaty and my motor skills a little shaky and when he ask me to get out of the car I walk with a waddle. Would it be “profiling” if He ask me If have been drinking? Well you say that’s different. Well, what If I told you I have a Neurological disorder and walk with AFO leg braces under my pants. Oh It is OK to do it to me about being a drunk driver but not to Hispanics who show “red flags” of being Illegal? How about this, an illegal alien can come into America carrying drugs when he see a border agent he runs back toward Mexico while shooting guns at the border agent. Now when that border agent shots back and hits him in the butt, The agent get prison time and everyone is defending the illegal drug smuggler. Then when we see a Phone video of an American Shot in the back handcuff? What is in the KOOLAID people?? I am Celeste Cortes the wife of Primitivo Cruz who is part of the Juarez Cartel. My husband and his buddy has America in his pocket. In fact my Husband has a warrant from Florida for Violation Of probation on child rape but YOU Americans pay for his court appointed attorney that got him Visitations, and reunification with my children after we escape from the Juarez Cartel. The United States want my children to be Juarez Cartel members despite they do not want to be. WHAT IS IT AMERICA? Why do you cater to my husband and his compadres WHY? To see the Documents that verify YOU the tax payer pay for this fugitive’s attorney
that got him Visitation then reunification services with the two minor children all will a Fugitive click
here http://floridafugitive.yolasite.com/

Jul 28, 2010 12:32am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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