Judge blocks parts of Indiana immigration law

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INDIANAPOLIS | Fri Jun 24, 2011 11:13pm EDT

INDIANAPOLIS (Reuters) - A federal judge on Friday temporarily blocked parts of an Indiana immigration law cracking down on illegal immigrants, in a ruling handed down a week before the bill was to go into effect.

The preliminary injunction granted by U.S. District Judge Sarah Evans Barker comes as a blow to lawmakers in the Republican-dominated state legislature who this year have taken a get-tough approach to immigration.

Barker's decision was in response to a lawsuit filed with backing from the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana and the National Immigration Law Center.

The judge's decision temporarily blocks a provision of the state law signed in May and scheduled to take effect July 1 that allows state and local police to arrest anyone ordered deported by an immigration court.

Barker faulted the Indiana bill for not requiring the arrested person be brought before a judge for potential release. She noted that under federal law, a foreign national can seek to overturn an immigration judge's removal order and be freed on bond.

The judge also blocked a section of the law that would prohibit any person in the state, other than a police officer, from knowingly accepting or offering a consular ID card as a valid form of identification.

Barker said in her judgment that states such as Indiana have sought to enact immigration laws that do not run afoul of federal powers.

"Unfortunately, insofar as Indiana's efforts to carve out such a permissible role, at least with regard to the two sections of the statute under review here, their results have proven to be seriously flawed and generally unsuccessful," Barker wrote in her judgment.

Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller said in a statement the ruling represented "an indictment of the federal government" for failing to "enact and enforce immigration policy."

"It underscores the challenge to Indiana and other state lawmakers who have tried to respond to Washington's failure," Zoeller said.

A spokeswoman for Mitch Daniels, the state's Republican governor, said the governor's office would not issue comment Friday on the ruling.

Several U.S. states have this year passed legislation cracking down on illegal immigration, inspired by Arizona, where Republican governor Jan Brewer signed a law in April 2010 including a measure requiring police to determine the immigration status of those they have detained and suspect are in the country illegally.

Key parts of that law were blocked by a federal judge, after the Obama administration successfully sued arguing that it improperly infringed on federal powers. The ruling was upheld by an appeals court, although Arizona is taking its challenge to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Utah and Georgia have also faced legal challenges to their state laws passed this year, while Alabama and South Carolina, which passed measures in June, are also likely to face legal challenges.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis and Tim Gaynor: Editing by Peter Bohan)

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Comments (8)
lklem wrote:
It appears that the liberals and their cry-baby alien lovers along with the ACLU want to further destroy our country and undermind our society. Allowing Illegals to live and pillage our city, county and state tax dollars is wrong. Politicians are courting the illegals vote and want to offer them the Dream Act. We should completely lock our boarders from any type of immirgration unless they are following our law and not make a law for a bunch of illegals and their liberal backers. Our President is currently pillaging our pockets by taking family members on African Trips at taxpayer expense. All this Potus knows how to do is spend money and lie to the american public.

Jun 24, 2011 10:45pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Remnest wrote:
@ Iklem

Yes by all means, deport every single one of the illegal immigrants ruining this country. The ones working 80-90 hours a week for pay you’d never take or hell…not get paid at all because people take advantage of the fact that they cant fight back.

Ignore the fact that hundreds of farms round the country employ these illegals because no one will work for such low pay and for those long hours. Ignore again, the fact that many of them actually willingly pay taxes.

And for the record, before you spew more garbage on the matter. The Obama administration has deported far more illegals than the Bush administration. Over 800k and counting.

I care little for these partisan debates, because at the end of the day neither group gets anything done right. But the issue of illegal immigrants is utterly irrelevant to the real issues facing our country.

Jun 25, 2011 9:50am EDT  --  Report as abuse
rbasher wrote:
Instead of suing states for trying to protect themselves from problems created by illegals, Obama should be exercising his duty to protect the country from the invasion that is actually killing Americans now. Just once it would be so wonderful to see a Democrat do what is best for the country rather than what helps his party get votes – legal or otherwise.

Jun 25, 2011 11:13am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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