The Court of Appeal denies the request of the administrator of Trump to raise limits to the immigration raids of the

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On Friday, the ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the Trump administration’s request for an emergency stay of a federal injunction restricting federal immigration agents to target migrants in South California according to characteristics such as ethnicity or language.
The panel of three judges rendered a unanimous decision which maintains the constraints of federal agents during immigration raids in the Los Angeles region.
The limitations include the prohibition to target people according to their ethnic, their accent, their language or their location, including being in a home depot or car washing.
The decision requires that federal agents have a more specific probable cause to make an arrest instead of generalized suspicions about the status of citizenship of a person.
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Friday, the ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the Trump administration’s request to raise restrictions on federal immigration raids. (Reuters)
The mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, celebrated the court’s decision as “a victory for the rule of law and for the city of Los Angeles”.
“The temporary prohibition order that protected our communities against immigration agents using racial profiling and other illegal tactics during their cruel and aggressive raids and sweeping will remain in place for the moment,” Bass said in a press release.
“We must always fight for justice,” she continued. “Los Angeles will be held together against the efforts of this administration to break the families who contribute every day to the life, culture and economy of our big city. No matter what, I will continue to support you and fight for your rights, your dignity and your place in this city, we all call at home.”
This occurs after recent raids in the Los Angeles region have targeted illegal immigrants working in local businesses, causing weeks of disorders on immigration arrests and mass deportation efforts of the administration.

The immigration raids of federal agents in the Los Angeles region in recent months have triggered weeks of trouble. (Getty Images)
About 4,000 soldiers from the National Guard and 700 Navies were deployed in Los Angeles to take control of demonstrations despite the opposition of state leaders and local leaders. At this point, most of the national guard troops and all the navies have since been withdrawn.
The administration was continued last month on the so -called “illegal stop practices” and “illegal confinement conditions”. A federal judge then made two temporary ban orders, one of which is to stop generalized raids according to the idea that many Hispanophone Hispanics are known to be in a certain place.
Administration lawyers filed an emergency appeal asking the court to temporarily suspend the injunction because this would cause “irreparable damage” and to place immigration officials in a “force of force”. The appeal was rejected on Friday before the court.
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The mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, celebrated the court’s decision as “a victory for the rule of law and for the city of Los Angeles”. (Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Images)
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During the arguments, one of the judges asked the lawyer several times to the government on a daily quota reported for the arrests related to immigration – a quota policy that the lawyer affirms does not exist – in reference to the comments made by the deputy chief of the White House, Stephen Miller, during an interview with Sean Hannity of Fox News in May.
“Under the direction of President Trump, we seek to set a target of a minimum of 3,000 arrests for ice every day, and President Trump will continue to push this number higher every day,” said Miller at the time.
Lee Ross of Fox News contributed to this report.