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  1. #1
    working4change
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    Utah Immigration Law Gets Hearing on Day of Debut

    Utah Immigration Law Gets Hearing on Day of Debut

    SALT LAKE CITY -- Police in Utah have been given the authority to check the citizenship status of anyone they arrest -- even if only for a few hours.

    The new law, House Bill 497, went into effect Tuesday, although civil rights attorneys spent much of Monday trying to persuade state officials to voluntarily delay its implementation.

    U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups has a hearing scheduled Tuesday afternoon in Salt Lake City where he could decide to halt enforcement of all or some of the law.

    The crux of the argument against the regulation is that it is similar to an Arizona law that is already working its way through the courts.

    The Utah law, signed by Republican Gov. Gary Herbert in March, requires people to prove their citizenship if they're arrested for serious crimes -- ranging from certain drug offenses to murder -- while giving police discretion to check citizenship after traffic infractions and other lesser offenses.

    As long as the law can be enforced, the American Civil Liberties Union and National Immigration Law Center warn the fallout could include racial profiling and the unlawful detention of U.S. citizens. The two groups filed a lawsuit last week challenging the measure's constitutionality.

    Police chiefs and county sheriffs, however, said very little will change in their handling of immigration laws, and none of them expected a rash of immigration-related arrests. No department contacted by The Associated Press reported any special training or preparation.

    "We're not going to be knocking on doors or rounding up people in the parks," Washington County Sheriff Cory Pulsipher said. "The people we're coming in contact with are already engaged in other criminal behavior."

    The citizenship status of anyone booked into a Utah jail for a felony or drunken driving is already checked because of a law passed in 2008.

    The new law goes further, allowing officers to arrest people for minor offenses if they can't prove their legal presence in the country, which has frightened many Hispanics, Salt Lake City Police Chief Chris Burbank said.

    Already, the department is hearing from shelters and rape crisis centers about victims who refuse to talk to the police because they fear deportation.

    "We do our job based on community trust," Burbank said. "When a segment of the community doesn't trust us, the rest of the communities lose trust in the police."

    Despite claims by opponents that the law it is almost identical to the Arizona law, Utah leaders closely scrutinized their version for constitutional red flags, said the bill's sponsor, Republican Rep. Stephen Sandstrom.

    Law enforcement has mostly been supportive of the bill, as well.

    "They're going to use this as a tool," Sandstrom said. "They were confident they could implement it, because it's spelled out pretty clearly when a person would be checked."

    Two other immigration laws went into effect Tuesday as well.

    One law would allow people to sponsor immigrants to the country if they accept financial liability, such as medical costs, housing and transportation. Although legislative attorneys raised constitutional concerns during the lawmaking session that ended March 10, no lawsuits have been filed to overturn that law.

    Another law will allow Utah employers to hire temporary workers from a Mexican state, although an agreement between the two states was still being negotiated.

    Another immigration law that won't go into effect until 2013 would create a program that allows illegal immigrants to remain in the state.

    All four measures have been touted as part of the Utah Compact, which was backed by religious and business leaders as a way to balance enforcement provisions with economic realities. The Compact also emphasized the importance of keeping families together.

    The Compact is being emulated in other states, including Georgia, Indiana and Maine.

    Critics argue the Compact is pushing amnesty laws, especially with the guest worker program.


    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/05 ... z1LwaOQ5fl

  2. #2
    working4change
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    Groups try to block use of Utah immigration enforcement law that went into effect at midnight


    By Associated Press, Updated: Tuesday, May 10, 3:57 AM

    SALT LAKE CITY — Police in Utah have been given the authority to check the citizenship status of anyone they arrest — even if only for a few hours.

    The new law, House Bill 497, went into effect Tuesday, although civil rights attorneys spent much of Monday trying to persuade state officials to voluntarily delay its implementation.

    U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups has a hearing scheduled Tuesday afternoon in Salt Lake City where he could decide to halt enforcement of all or some of the law.

    The crux of the argument against the regulation is that it is similar to an Arizona law that is already working its way through the courts.

    The Utah law, signed by Republican Gov. Gary Herbert in March, requires people to prove their citizenship if they’re arrested for serious crimes — ranging from certain drug offenses to murder — while giving police discretion to check citizenship after traffic infractions and other lesser offenses.

    As long as the law can be enforced, the American Civil Liberties Union and National Immigration Law Center warn the fallout could include racial profiling and the unlawful detention of U.S. citizens. The two groups filed a lawsuit last week challenging the measure’s constitutionality.

    Police chiefs and county sheriffs, however, said very little will change in their handling of immigration laws, and none of them expected a rash of immigration-related arrests. No department contacted by The Associated Press reported any special training or preparation.

    “We’re not going to be knocking on doors or rounding up people in the parks,â€

  3. #3
    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    Why have the groups that usually file lawsuits over things like this, such as FAIR, NumbersUSA, Judicial Watch, or IRLI gone after SB 116 amnesty in Utah yet?

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  4. #4
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    They won't enforce it. Business as usual. Illegals are referred to as "part of the community" so what does that tell you?

  5. #5
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Federal judge blocks Utah immigration law

    By Josh Loftin
    Associated Press / May 10, 2011
    16 Comments

    SALT LAKE CITY—A federal judge on Tuesday blocked a Utah immigration law that would have allowed police to check the citizenship status of anyone they arrest, citing its similarities to the most controversial parts of an Arizona law that seems bound for the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Tweet 3 people Tweeted this.ShareThis .U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups issued his ruling in Salt Lake City just 14 hours after the law went into effect, saying that there is sufficient evidence that at least some portions of the Utah legislation will be found unconstitutional.

    The American Civil Liberties Union and National Immigration Law Center last week sued to stop the implementation of House Bill 497, saying it could lead to racial profiling. The civil rights groups submitted hundreds of pages of evidence and affidavits to prove their claims ahead of Tuesday's hearing.

    Utah Assistant Attorney General Jerrold Jensen said the ruling was "not a surprise."

    Jensen said after the hearing that the law is "fully constitutional" and that his office plans to "argue it vigorously."

    Utah's law is significantly different from Arizona's because it doesn't allow police to check the status of every person they encounter, Jensen said in court.

    "They want to try the Arizona law, and they make allegations against Utah that may well have applied to Arizona," Jensen said. "But just because the Arizona law is unconstitutional doesn't mean the Utah law is unconstitutional."

    The next hearing on is set for July 14, where both sides will be expected to argue whether the law is constitutional. Waddoups could then decide whether to allow the law to go into effect or overturn it because of constitutional issues. If he overturned it, the measure's fate could depend on the U.S. Supreme Court's opinion on the Arizona law.

    Waddoups' decision comes a day after Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer announced a plan to ask the nation's high court to overturn a ruling that put her state's immigration enforcement law on hold.

    The state must file the appeal by a July 11 deadline. The Supreme Court has discretion on whether to hear the case.

    "It seems like this is a big enough national issue that it will ultimately be determined by the United States Supreme Court," said Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne on Monday.

    In its April ruling, a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said the U.S. Justice Department is likely to prove the law is unconstitutional and succeed in its argument that Congress has given the federal government sole authority to enforce immigration laws.

    Brewer's lawyers have argued the federal government hasn't effectively enforced immigration law at the border and in Arizona's interior and that the state's intent in passing the law was to assist federal authorities as Congress has encouraged.

    The federal government argued the law intrudes on its exclusive authority to regulate immigration, disrupts relations between the U.S. and Mexico, hinders cooperation between state and federal officials, and burdens legal immigrants.

    The Utah law, signed by Republican Gov. Gary Herbert in March, would require police to check the citizenship status of anyone arrested on suspicion of a felony or class-A misdemeanor, while giving officers discretion to check the citizenship of those stopped for traffic infractions and other lesser offenses.

    Class A misdemeanors include theft, negligent homicide and criminal mischief, while felonies range from aggravated burglary to rape and murder.

    In a statement after the ruling, Herbert said he has told law enforcement officials the law is on hold but was confident the state would prevail.

    "Utah's Attorney General and state Legislature worked hard to craft a bill that would withstand constitutional scrutiny," Herbert said in a statement after the ruling. "Utah will have ample opportunity in court to demonstrate this bill is on solid footing."

    ACLU managing attorney Cecillia Wang said the law is potentially worse than the Arizona law because anyone stopped by police could be required to prove their citizenship status. Making it optional for lesser offenses makes racial profiling even more likely, she said.

    "This violates the Constitutional right of every American," Wang said. "The times where officers have discretion are the vast number of times that people encounter police."

    Police chiefs and county sheriffs have said very little will change in their handling of immigration laws. That was true on Tuesday -- for 14 hours, at least -- when no arrests were made based on the new law.

    There has also been very little public outcry about the law, and no protests or rallies were reported Tuesday.

    That is due in large part to the generally positive response from the public to the bipartisan immigration overhaul passed by the Legislature in March, said National Immigration Law Center managing attorney Karen Tumlin.

    The package of reforms is based on compassion in immigration laws, and includes a guest worker program starting in 2013 to allow illegal immigrants to remain, live and work in the state, winning support from some liberal immigration advocates but has been criticized by opponents as an amnesty program.

    ------

    Josh Loftin can be reached at http://twitter.com/joshloftin

    http://www.boston.com/news/nation/artic ... op+Stories
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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