Texas Senate Bill 4, immigration and Supreme Court
Digest more
U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals justices in a 2-1 ruling stated that Texas leaders did not have the authority to enforce immigration laws.
The law would let authorities arrest and prosecute people suspected of illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.
A group of migrants walk to an El Paso County Sheriff transport van to be taken to processing on the day the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments on Texas' motion to lift a block on its SB4 immigration law that would allow state officials to arrest migrants suspected of being in the country illegally.
The Texas law was allowed to take effect for several hours last week, after the U.S. Supreme Court reversed its hold on the law, allowing an earlier ruling by a three-judge panel of the appeals ...
Texas will appeal a ruling by a federal judge to block the state from enforcing a law that would make illegal immigration a state crime, Gov. Greg Abbott said Thursday, further escalating his ...
The back-and-forth legal battle over a controversial Texas immigration law now rests with three judges on an appeals court panel. The law, currently stayed until the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ...
The back-and-forth legal battle over a controversial Texas immigration law now rests with three judges on an appeals court panel. The law, currently stayed until the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ...
The back-and-forth legal battle over a controversial Texas immigration law now rests with three judges on an appeals court panel. The law, currently stayed until the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ...