Supreme Court allows Trump ICE raids to resume in California
- On September 8, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 to remove the requirement that federal officers have "reasonable suspicion" before carrying out immigration enforcement actions in California and other areas.
- This ruling overturned a lower court injunction that had required immigration agents to have reasonable suspicion, including for stops involving U.S. citizens.
- The Trump administration, seeking a hardline immigration crackdown, announced Operation Midway Blitz targeting undocumented immigrants with criminal records and conducted large raids, including nearly 500 detentions at a Georgia EV battery plant.
- Justice Sotomayor dissented strongly, calling the decision a grave misuse of emergency powers, while Kavanaugh wrote that ethnicity is a relevant factor and the government showed likely success in enforcement.
- The ruling enables ICE to resume broader raids without judicial oversight, intensifying the administration's crackdown but raising ongoing concerns about racial profiling and constitutional rights.
78 Articles
78 Articles
Milwaukee leaders believe recent Supreme Court ruling allows racial profiling
Milwaukee city leaders and Forward Latino are opposing a Supreme Court decision that allows federal agents to conduct immigration operations in Los Angeles, citing concerns over racial profiling.
Legacy Newscasts Fret Over SCOTUS Ruling Allowing ICE Crackdown
Legacy Newscasts Fret Over SCOTUS Ruling Allowing ICE Crackdown In what has become a predictable and boring exercise, the legacy news media freak out over a Supreme Court action that puts a stop to activist obstruction of President Trump’s agenda. This time, on immigration, with the added bonus of a freakout over the president’s "Chipocalypse Now” meme. The tone was set early by CBS’s John Dickerson, perhaps trying to get as much off his chest …
Noem v Vazquez Perdomo: Conservative Justices Declare Racial Profiling Just Fine If Mister Trump Asks For It
On Monday, the Supreme Court’s Republican majority issued an order that allows federal immigration agents in Los Angeles to resume arresting Latino people en masse simply because they are Latino. The conservative justices did not sign the order in Noem v. Vazquez Perdomo; the public only knows who is responsible because Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote a dissent, joined by the two other liberal justices. (Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote a concurrence…
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