Judge Rules ICE Agents Can Arrest Suspected Migrants Near Churches

A federal judge on Friday dismissed a lawsuit brought by churches challenging the Trump administrationโ€™s new policy permitting immigration officers to make arrests near churches, ruling that the religious groups failed to demonstrate sufficient harm to justify legal action.

U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump appointee, found that concerns about declining attendance or potential harassment by immigration officers were too speculative to support the case, the Washington Times reported.

The decision effectively upholdsโ€”for nowโ€”the Department of Homeland Securityโ€™s reversal of a Biden-era policy that had sharply restricted immigration enforcement near so-called โ€œsensitive locationsโ€ such as churches, schools, hospitals, day cares, community centers, and other public gathering places.

Churches and schools have been central to immigration advocacy efforts, with religious organizations reporting empty pews following the Trump administrationโ€™s policy changes.

However, the judge noted that the decline in attendance could just as easily be attributed to Trumpโ€™s broader mass deportation agenda as to the specific rollback of the sensitive locations policy.

โ€œAt least on the existing record, the plaintiffs have not presented โ€™substantial evidenceโ€™ that the policy rescission โ€” as opposed to the administrationโ€™s broader immigration crackdown โ€” has caused the widespread congregant absences from religious services,โ€ Friedrich ruled.

He did not weigh in on the legality or merits of the new Trump policy, instead ruling that the plaintiffs lacked the necessary โ€œstandingโ€ to bring the lawsuit.

In contrast, a federal judge in Maryland reached a different conclusion, issuing an injunction that blocks Homeland Security from making immigration arrests near a specific group of houses of worship that had filed suit.

Earlier this month, a judge in Bostonย foundย a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent in contempt after he detained a suspect while the man was on trial.

ICE agent Brian Sullivan apprehended Wilson Martell-Lebron as he was leaving the courthouse. However, a Boston Municipal Court judge ruled that Sullivan had violated Martell-Lebronโ€™s rights to due process and a fair trial by taking him into custody during the proceedings, the Associated Press reported.

โ€œItโ€™s a case of violating a defendantโ€™s right to present at trial and confront witnesses against him,โ€ Judge Mark Summerville said from the bench. โ€œIt couldnโ€™t be more serious.โ€

Summerville dismissed the charge against Martell-Lebron for making false statements on his driverโ€™s license applicationโ€”specifically, claiming he wasnโ€™t Martell-Lebron, the report said. Following this action, the judge filed the contempt charge against Sullivan, which may prompt Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden to review the case and decide whether any charges should be pursued.

โ€œItโ€™s reprehensible,โ€ Ryan Sullivan, one of Martell-Lebronโ€™s lawyers said. โ€œLaw enforcement agents have a job to see justice is done. Prosecutors have a job to see justice is done. There is no greater injustice in my mind than the government arresting someone, without identifying themselves, and preventing them from exercising their constitutionally guaranteed right to a jury trial.โ€

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The incident is the latest as federal immigration agents target the Boston area in search of people in the country illegally. Boston has declared itself a โ€œsanctuary cityโ€ for illegal aliens, meaning city officials have barred local police from assisting federal immigration officers.

President Donald Trumpโ€™s border czar Tom Homan and Republicans in Congress have criticized the city for not cooperating in deporting individuals charged with violent crimes.

Mayor Michelle Wu, a Democrat running for reelection this year, stated that she wants Boston to remain a welcoming place for immigrants, emphasizing that city policies are designed to limit cooperation with immigration enforcement, the AP said.


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