Ƶ Comment on Supreme Court Ruling Allowing Indiscriminate ICE Stops in Los Angeles

September 8, 2025 2:00 pm

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court today granted the federal government’s request to pause a court order that prohibited federal agencies from continuing their unlawful actions in Los Angeles and surrounding counties.

The 6-3 decision, which provided no reasoning, reverses a ruling from two lower courts in Perdomo v. Noem that bars immigration agents from stopping individuals without reasonable suspicion and from relying solely on four factors — alone or in combination — including apparent race or ethnicity; speaking Spanish or English with an accent; presence in a particular location like a bus stop, car wash, or agricultural site; or the type of work a person does.

The following is reaction from Cecillia Wang, national legal director of the Ƶ:

“Today's Supreme Court order puts people at grave risk, allowing federal agents in Southern California to target individuals because of their race, how they speak, the jobs they work, or just being at a bus stop or the car wash when ICE agents decide to raid a place. For anyone perceived as Latino by an ICE agent, this means living in a fearful ‘papers please’ regime, with risks of violent ICE arrests and detention.

“The Supreme Court's order is outrageous because it includes no reasoning itself but puts on hold the well-reasoned opinions of the lower federal courts. We will fight on in this case and others for our fundamental right to go about our lives without being targeted by government agents based on racial profiling.”

The Ƶ of Southern California press release is here:

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