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Texas� new immigration law sows confusion and uncertainty along the border

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Texas’ new immigration law sows confusion and uncertainty along the border

A US Border Patrol agent watches over migrants waiting to be processed after crossing from Mexico into the United States on December 17 in Eagle Pass, Texas.

(CNN) â€� A new law that makes entering Texas illegally a state crime is sowing confusion andĚýuncertaintyĚýamong undocumentedĚýmigrantsĚýand mixed status familiesĚýalong the US-Mexico border, according to immigration advocates.

ManyĚýof those advocatesĚýtell CNN they fear a wave of racial profiling as well as detentions and attempted deportations by state authorities whenĚýthe lawĚýis expected toĚýtakeĚýeffect in March.

“There are a lot of unknowns about how this law will be implemented,� Houston immigration attorney Roberto Quijano said a recent town hall meeting about the law.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed theĚý, into law on Monday, granting local law enforcement the power to arrestĚýmigrants and judges the ability toĚýissue orders to remove them to Mexico, in a state where Latinos representĚý

“We have a lot of concerns about racial profiling and racism,� Ramona Casas, a community organizer with the nonprofit Arise Adelante, said this week at a protest against SB4. “These laws open the door for that. They threaten families.�

Casas said she believesĚýLatinos in Texas will be forced to carry their passports and IDs at all timesĚýin order to avoid being detained on suspicion of being undocumented.

For many opponents the new law harkens to a similarĚýâ€� which was largely struck down by the US Supreme Court two years later. The high court concluded in 2012 that the federal government had the power to block the law but let stand a controversial provision allowing police to check a person’s immigration status while enforcing other laws if “reasonable suspicionâ€� existed that the person is in the United States illegally.

Critics have said the new Texas law is unconstitutional and civil rights groups filed a lawsuit against the state on Tuesday.

The AmericanĚýCivilĚýLiberties Union, the ACLU ofĚýTexas, and theĚýTexasĚýCivilĚýRightsĚýProject argued that the controversial border law is unconstitutional because it preempts federal law.

“Immigration is a quintessentially federal authority,”Ěýthe organizations argue,ĚýaccordingĚýto the lawsuit.

The enforcement of immigration law typically falls under the purview of the federal government, not individual state governments.ĚýAsked this week whether President Joe Biden supported the federal government taking legal action on the matter, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the Department of Justice would decide whether a lawsuit would be filed and that she was “not going to get ahead of that.â€�

CNN has reached out to Abbott’s officeĚýand the defendantsĚýfor comment on the lawsuit.

Late last month,Ěýthe executives of El PasoĚýcountyĚýâ€� as well as HarrisĚýcounty, which is home to Houston, and TravisĚýcounty,Ěýwhere Austin is located â€� penned a letter to Biden, urging him to stop SB 4 from going into effect, citing concerns about the measure’s constitutionality and whether it will truly make communitiesĚýsafer. The three counties represent nearly a quarter of the state’s population.

The new law comes amid a surge of migrants on the southern border that has placed pressure on local, state and federal authorities to crack down on illegal crossings.

On Tuesday alone, US Border Patrol processed 10,500 migrants who crossed the US-Mexico border unlawfully, according to a Homeland Security official.ĚýCurrent and former US officials have warned that the current pace of arrests isĚýpushingĚýfederal resources to the limit, with the systemĚýnearing a “breaking point.â€� There are over 26,000 migrants in border custody, the official said.

Frustrated byĚýwhat Abbott saysĚýis the federal government’s failure to secure the border, the governor is givingĚýstate law enforcement new powers to detain and deport migrants.

Abbott and the Biden administration have sparred over some of the state’s measures to curb illegal immigration along the southern border.

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo told reporters Tuesday that the state was using SB4 to “weaponize immigration � to score political points.�

“Just in Harris County, there are 500,000 undocumented immigrants. These individuals work hard like all of us and they face crime like any of us. They’re survivors of domestic violence. They want to protect their children and their families. Now they’re going to feel like they can’t call the police because the police is � ICE,� said Hidalgo, referring to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Immigration advocates caution the new law will give local law enforcement officers the power of federal immigration agents and lead to more harassment and abuse in border communities.

Marisa LimĂłn Garza, executive director at Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center in El Paso, Texas, warned that SB4 would expose countless US citizens, mixed status households, and undocumented immigrants to unlawful interrogations, searches, seizures, and arrestsĚýâ€�based on how â€foreignâ€� they look and how they behave.â€�

Dylan Corbett, executive director of the Hope Border Institute in El Paso, said the new law would criminalize people seeking safety at the border and instill fear in families throughout Texas.

“The day it goes into effect, it will disastrously make every Texan less safe by eroding fundamental community trust with law enforcement,� he said.

In late November, at a Houston-area town hall about the new law, Cesar Espinosa, executive director of the immigrant-led civil rights organization FIEL, said their offices had been inundated with calls.

“We want to remind the community to remain calm,� he said. “Although they are bad laws, they have yet to be implemented. At this point we also have questions about how and if they may be even be able to be implemented.�

CNN’s Ray Sanchez, Michael Williams, Nikki Carvajal and Priscilla Alvarez contributed to this report, which was written by Sanchez.

The-CNN-Wire

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