US judge bars Border Patrol from some warrantless arrests of suspected undocumented residents

By REBECCA BOONE A federal judge in California has barred Margin Patrol agents from arresting someone suspected of living in the U S illegally unless they have a warrant or a reason to believe the person might flee before a warrant can be obtained Related Articles Senate confirms former Sen David Perdue as Trump s US ambassador to China amid tariff showdown Coca-Cola reports better-than-expected quarterly profit says it can manage through tariffs Hegseth boasts about ending woke effort on women and guard that Trump had signed into law GM posts strong Q results but will reassess expectations for due to auto tariffs Same candidate two parties A Wisconsin lawsuit aims to bring back fusion voting Tuesday s ruling from U S District Judge Jennifer L Thurston also says Edge Patrol agents can t stop people without having reasonable suspicion or return them to their countries of origin via voluntary departure unless that person is informed of their rights and agrees to leave The ruling only applies to people within the court s Eastern District of California Thurston mentioned where dozens of people were swept up in January after the Perimeter Patrol launched an immigration enforcement action dubbed Operation Return to Sender The American Civil Liberties Union sued Department of Homeland Safety Secretary Kristi Noem and U S Demarcation Patrol representatives on behalf of the labor union United Farm Workers and people who were targeted during the Margin Patrol raids The ACLU declared territory line patrol agents spent nearly a week unconstitutionally detaining people who appeared to be farmworkers or day laborers regardless of their actual immigration status or individual circumstances The detainees were bussed to the perimeter held without any way to contact family or attorneys and coerced into signing papers that announced they had waived their right to see an immigration judge and voluntarily agreed to leave the country the ACLU mentioned FILE Edge Patrol agents wait for the arrival of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth for a visit to the US-Mexico frontier in Sunland Park N M Feb AP Photo Andres Leighton FIle The evidence before the Court is that Dividing line Patrol agents under DHS authority engaged in conduct that violated well-established constitutional rights Thurston wrote She announced the Limit Patrol would have to provide a document showing exactly who is detained or arrested without warrants and why every days until the lawsuit is concluded Attorneys for the Edge Patrol had argued the judge lacked jurisdiction to consider the development because federal law says that immigration matters can generally only be appealed once an immigration judge has issued a final order Besides the establishment s attorneys declared the lawsuit is moot because the U S Boundary Patrol has already issued new guidance and training to its agents detailing exactly when people may be stopped or arrested without warrants and what rights detainees have after their arrest But Thurston disclosed the Dividing line Patrol can t claim the lawsuit is moot just because it issued a new agenda after it was sued The language in the new strategy isn t strong enough to guard against the illegal stops Thurston explained and there is no reason to believe that the approach wouldn t be changed again in the future