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Another Judge Deems ICE’s Courthouse Arrests Unlawful

A New York federal judge ruled ICE’s arrests of immigrants at courthouses violate a longstanding bar on making civil arrests there

Mazin Sidahmed

Sep 30, 2020

The Niagara County Court House and Clerk's office.

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This summary was featured in Documented’s Early Arrival newsletter. You can subscribe to receive it in your inbox three times per week here.

On Monday, New York federal judge Alison Nathan rejected Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit that blocks the agency from making arrests in New York state courthouses. Nathan became the latest judge to rule that ICE’s courthouse arrests do in fact violate a longstanding bar on making civil arrests at courthouses. The Manhattan judge rejected ICE’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit. ICE ramped up arrests in courthouses across the country after President Trump took office, leading to a 1700% increase in New York state. The New York State Senate recently passed the Protect Our Courts Act that makes it unlawful for ICE to make a civil arrest in New York courts. Reuters

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Mazin Sidahmed

Mazin Sidahmed is the co-executive director of Documented. He previously worked for the Guardian US in New York. He started his career writing for The Daily Star in Beirut and he also contributed to Politico New York.

@mazsidahmed

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