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Judge Limits Border Patrol Stops in California, Citing Civil Rights Concerns

  • On April 29, 2025, a federal judge in California’s Eastern District prohibited Border Patrol agents from arresting individuals suspected of being in the country unlawfully without first obtaining a warrant or having reasonable suspicion.
  • This ruling followed ACLU litigation challenging Border Patrol raids called Operation Return to Sender, which allegedly involved warrantless detentions and coercion of farmworkers in January 2025.
  • The court found Border Patrol violated constitutional rights by unlawfully detaining people, requiring agents to document stops every 60 days and follow new guidance on arrests and detainees' rights.
  • Judge Thurston noted that the evidence presented demonstrated that Border Patrol agents operating under DHS oversight committed actions that infringed upon established constitutional protections, highlighting continuing deficiencies in current policies.
  • The injunction limits warrantless arrests within the court’s Eastern District farmland area but does not block enforcement elsewhere, though critics foresee challenges balancing civil rights and immigration duties.
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KTVU FOX 2 broke the news in Oakland, United States on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.
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