
Trump administration sues four New Jersey cities over immigration cases
May 23 (Reuters) - The Trump administration announced on Friday that it had filed a lawsuit against four New Jersey cities, accusing them of being so-called sanctuary jurisdictions and obstructing federal immigration agents, according to court documents.
The suit, filed in federal court in New Jersey on Thursday, said Newark, Hoboken, Jersey City and Paterson along with the municipalities' city councils and mayors are breaking federal immigration law.
The local policies in the cities deny federal immigration agents access to undocumented immigrants in local custody, restrict local officers from handing over those in custody to federal agents and bar otherwise willing local officers from providing information to federal immigration authorities, the suit said.
"The express purpose and clear effect of these policies is to thwart federal immigration enforcement," the suit said, asking the judge in the case to bar the cities from enforcing these policies.
One of the defendants in the lawsuit, Hoboken Mayor Ravinder Bhalla, said in a statement his city will not "be commandeered" by federal agents to enforce federal immigration orders, especially those that violate the constitutional rights of its residents and non-resident visitors.
"Make no mistake about it - Hoboken will never aid Donald Trump's inhumane treatment of law-abiding immigrants & residents," he wrote. "We will not back down."
Another defendant in the lawsuit, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, was taken into custody on May 9 in a scuffle at the gate of a privately run federal immigration detention center during a visit by three members of New Jersey's congressional delegation. Days later, a misdemeanor charge of trespassing against the Democrat gubernatorial candidate was dropped.
In April, a federal judge blocked Donald Trump's administration from withholding federal funding from more than a dozen jurisdictions that have declined to cooperate with the Republican president's hardline immigration crackdown.
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Daily Mail
17 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Democrat mayor SUES Trump darling Alina Habba for ordering his ICE arrest
The mayor of Newark, New Jersey has filed a lawsuit against Trump prosecutor Alina Habba following a dramatic arrest last month at an immigration detention facility. Democrat Ras Baraka, who is running to be New Jersey's next governor, filed the federal lawsuit on Tuesday against Habba, the interim US Attorney for the District of New Jersey. The suit accuses her of false arrest, malicious prosecution and defaming him in an effort to advance her political career, according to the Wall Street Journal. The MAGA prosecutor had charged Baraka with trespassing when he arrived at Delaney Hall in the outskirts of Newark, which is now being used as a migrant detention center, on May 9. But less than two weeks later, Habba - who once served as Trump's personal attorney - announced her office was dropping the charges against Baraka without offering any explanation. The mayor is seeking an unspecified amount of 'compensatory damages for pain, suffering, stress, humiliation' and other purported consequences of the incident, as well as punitive damages. However, Baraka argued his lawsuit 'is not about revenge' 'Ultimately, I think this is about them taking accountability for what has happened to me,' he said at a news conference outside the federal courthouse in Newark. 'Somebody should be responsible for what happened,' he continued, according to the New York Times. 'To handcuff me, to drag me away, to take my fingerprints and mugshots for a misdemeanor, it's egregious and malicious.' 'The reality is I didn't do anything. I went down there for a press conference. I was invited to the gate, people approached me and were very loud and abusive to me,' he continued. The mayor has maintained that he was invited to the property to conduct oversight along with members of New Jersey's congressional delegation - Rob Menendez, LaMonica McIver and Bonnie Watson Coleman. But when Baraka arrived, he claims Ricky Patel, the supervising agent with Homeland Security Investigations who is also named as a defendant in the case, denied him entry into the facility and asked him to leave the premises. Patel even threatened to arrest him and allegedly egged his fellow agents to 'take him down, at which point Baraka says Homeland Security agents violently pulled his arms, handcuffed him and took him into custody, Politico reports. Dramatic footage from the scene then shows the mayor walking from the facility side of the incident showed Baraka walking from the facility side of the fence to the street side, where residents were protesting the ICE facility. Soon, uniformed officials could be seen coming to arrest him. As they did, people could be heard urging the group to protect the mayor. The video shows a crowd forming and pushing as officials led off a handcuffed Baraka. The mayor's lawsuit now claims Habba authorized his 'false arrest' in violation of the Fourth Amendment despite 'clear evidence that Mayor Baraka had not committed the petty offense of' defiant trespass. It argues she instead was acting as a 'political operative' in bringing the trespassing charge against him. The federal suit also contends that race played a role in the episode, alleging that Habba and Patel sought 'to assure that the evening news included videos of the black mayor of Newark, New Jersey being led away in handcuffs by federal officials.' Additionally, it accuses Habba of making defamatory statements in media interviews and on social media, wrongfully accusing Baraka of grandstanding and saying he willingly chose to disobey the law. Much of the lawsuit leans on remarks US Magistrate Judge Andre Espinosa made as he hit out at Habba and her office when he threw away the charges. 'The hasty arrest of Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, followed swiftly by the dismissal of these trespassing charges a mere 13 days later, suggests a worrisome misstep by your Office,' the judge wrote in his ruling. The fact that the trespassing charge was withdrawn, Baraka said, meant he had to defend himself in the media and argue his case when he had done nothing wrong. 'I want somebody to apologize, write a letter, say this was wrong, come out and say, "We shouldn´t have done this,"' the mayor said at his press conference. Aides to the Newark mayor have further claimed that Patel received several calls just before Baraka was taken into custody, according to the Times. His lawyer, Nancy Erika Smith, said the lawsuit will now enable her to subpoena the supervising agent's phone records to determine who he may have been speaking to. The lawsuit also serves as a response to another suit the Justice Department filed against Newark and three other New Jersey cities over their sanctuary policies, Baraka said. But it comes on the first day of early voting in the Democratic primary for governor to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy. The Newark mayor has portrayed himself in the election as the most aggressive Democrat to fight the Trump administration. At his press conference on Tuesday, though, Baraka described the arrest and fallout as a distraction from his campaign. 'But I also think that us not responding is consent,' he said. He is being supported in his lawsuit by Congresswoman McIver, who is facing two assault charges relating to the May 9 protest. She has denied the charges, and a preliminary hearing is scheduled later this month. 'The way Mayor Baraka was treated at Delaney Hall was outrageous,' she told 'It is beyond clear that there were never any legal or factual basis to arrest or charge him. 'The [Trump] administration's playing politics with our justice system is disgraceful,' McIver added. Habba shared her thoughts on the matter in a post on X Monday night In fact Smith said she expects to sue Trump's administration, but is required to wait six months. 'It's really important for all of us to stand up for democracy,' the lawyer said. 'Mayor Baraka files this lawsuit not just to vindicate himself, but for all of us, for our freedom, for all our constitutional rights.' Neither Habba nor Patel have responded to the lawsuit, and has reached out to the US Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey. But in a post on X Monday night, Habba wrote: 'My advice to the mayor - feel free to join me in prioritizing violent crime and public safety. Far better use of time for the great citizens of New Jersey.' Meanwhile, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told 'Mayor Baraka is trying to rewrite history with this frivolous lawsuit. 'It's too late: The American people saw with their own eyes his actions that put the safety of our law enforcement agents and the staff at Delaney Hall at risk — all for the sake of the dangerous criminals housed there.'


Telegraph
19 hours ago
- Telegraph
Police officer killed by train ‘seconds after being ordered to stay off tracks'
A police sergeant was struck by a train seconds after being told to stay off the tracks, an inquest has heard. Two trains, which could have been travelling up to 120mph, were coming from both directions before Sgt Graham Saville, 46, was fatally injured on the line in Balderton, near Newark, Notts, on Aug 24 2023. Sgt Saville, who was based in Newark, was responding to a concerns about a man, referred to in court as Patient C, who had called emergency services that evening saying he had taken an overdose. Nottinghamshire Coroners Court heard that an order telling the officers to stay off the line was made by the control room 20 minutes after the first call was made about Patient C going towards the railway line. The order was made 'far too late' for officers to get off the track, the inquest heard. Coroner Laurinda Bower also told the inquest that there was no successful communication from the police control room to Network Rail asking it to stop the trains until 20 seconds before Sgt Saville was struck. Pc Liv Stockdale, who was on duty alongside Sgt Saville and Pc Ben Powell at the time of the incident, gave evidence to the inquest on Tuesday. The court heard Pc Stockdale repeatedly asked the control room to contact Network Rail for the trains to be stopped and said Patient C was 'running down' to the tracks. The coroner asked: 'Were you reassured by that communication that there was contact with Network Rail to get an urgent stop on the line?' The witness replied: 'From what I remember, yes.' The court heard there was 'very little time' between Sgt Saville arriving at the scene and him instructing Pc Powell to go over the fence, which he did, followed by Sgt Saville and Pc Stockdale. Pc Stockdale told the inquest: 'When we went down on to the trackside it was more to keep an eye on Patient C because he was running further away from where we were initially stood.' Ms Bower said: 'At 19:08 hours you put another call out over the radio saying you can see a train in both directions coming. In fairness to you this is a matter of seconds, about 15 seconds, before sadly Graham is struck.' The inquest heard that the trains travel at around 120mph and can cover 55 metres per second, which the coroner described as 'incredibly fast, blink of an eye stuff'. The inquest heard there was an instruction made over the radio at 7.08pm that 'all officers are to stay off the tracks', but this was two seconds before Sgt Saville was hit. Pc Stockdale said: 'From being down on the trackside, the signal was very intermittent. We were unsure what was actually getting passed to the control room at the time.' Sgt Saville's Taser record suggests the trigger was pressed at around the same time that Pc Stockdale said she could see the trains coming. The inquest heard that Sgt Saville's life support was withdrawn five days after he was injured. Joanne Saville, the sergeant's wife, read a pen portrait to the inquest, in which she called her husband a 'fantastic' father of two and a compassionate 'big softy' who was also 'logical, measured and calm under pressure'. She added: 'These qualities made him an excellent police officer but also a great person to have in your life. 'Graham never thought of himself as being brave or a hero. He was a policeman who just got on with what needed to be done. 'He loved this job and the challenges he faced every day. We are immensely proud of everything he's done.' The inquest continues.


Reuters
a day ago
- Reuters
New Jersey mayor sues Trump officials over arrest at immigration center
WASHINGTON, June 3 (Reuters) - The mayor of Newark, New Jersey sued two U.S. law enforcement officials on Tuesday, alleging he was wrongly arrested and prosecuted as part of a politically motivated move by President Donald Trump's administration. The lawsuit from Democrat Ras Baraka, who is also running for New Jersey governor, alleges he was arrested for trespassing without cause and maliciously prosecuted following a tense confrontation last month at a privately run immigration detention center in Newark. The encounter drew widespread attention at a time of growing clashes between the Trump administration and Democrats over Trump's hardline approach to immigration. The complaint names as defendants Alina Habba, the acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey who brought the case and is a former personal lawyer to Trump, and Ricky Patel, a Department of Homeland Security official in Newark, who allegedly ordered the arrest. In a post on X following reports that Baraka planned to sue, Habba said Baraka should "join me in prioritizing violent crime and public safety." "Far better use of time for the great citizens of New Jersey," she wrote. Spokespeople for Habba's office and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately return requests for comment on Tuesday. Prosecutors dropped the case against Baraka 10 days after his arrest. Habba said the decision was made "for the sake of moving forward" but offered no further explanation. Her office then charged Democratic U.S. Representative LaMonica McIver with assaulting and resisting officers who were trying to arrest Baraka. McIver has not yet entered a plea but has denounced the charges as political intimidation. Baraka was arrested on May 9 after U.S. authorities said he refused to leave the facility, known as Delaney Hall, where McIver and two other Democratic members of Congress from New Jersey were conducting an oversight visit. Baraka's lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in New Jersey, alleges a guard invited Baraka onto the property and he agreed to leave after he was threatened with arrest. Stephen Demanovich, one of the prosecutors assigned to the McIver case and the now-dismissed case against Baraka, is not a career member of the office, and was tapped by Habba in May to serve as her counsel. Shortly before joining her office, he moderated a panel hosted by conservative legal group the Federalist Society entitled "The Weaponization of DOJ?" Baraka's case is likely to face legal barriers given broad protections for U.S. officials acting in an official role. His complaint alleges Habba and Patel acted outside their formal responsibilities. The lawsuit alleges violations of the U.S. Constitution and defamation. It seeks an unspecified sum in damages for emotional distress, reputational damage and other harms.