Ramon Torres had been a U.S. citizen for nearly ten years when he was detained for four days on an immigration hold 鈥 despite having a U.S. passport, a Louisiana driver鈥檚 license, and a Social Security card, and despite that fact that a court ordered his release.
Torres鈥 ordeal began in August 2018, when he was pulled over and arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated. Torres, a naturalized U.S. citizen since 2009, was carrying multiple forms of identification, including his driver鈥檚 license and other security credentials. Torres was booked at the Ascension Parish Jail, and the next day the Parish Court ordered his release.
But Torres wasn鈥檛 released. Instead, the Ascension Parish Sheriff鈥檚 Office placed an 鈥渋mmigration hold鈥 on Torres on the suspicion that he was unlawfully present in the United States.
The basis for this suspicion? He had a Latinx name and brown skin. Staff at the sheriff鈥檚 office explained that they had a policy of detaining all Latinx people for immigration review.
When his friends and family tried to intervene and provide additional documentation proving that Torres is a U.S. citizen, officials in the sheriff鈥檚 office still didn鈥檛 budge.
Torres spent four days in jail before a lawyer鈥檚 involvement finally secured his release.
This was a flagrant violation of Torres鈥 constitutional rights, and this week the 老澳门开奖结果 of Louisiana .
Racial profiling is illegal, unconstitutional, and deeply harmful to families and communities 鈥 diverting scarce resources away from pressing public safety priorities.
What happened to Torres is inexcusable and antithetical to our most cherished American values.
Unfortunately, this is what happens when local law enforcement authorities get in the business of federal immigration enforcement. From Sheriff Joe Arpaio鈥檚 in Arizona to the Trump administration鈥檚 mass deportation and detention agenda, immigrant communities are being unfairly targeted, harassed, and terrorized by the very law enforcement agencies that should be protecting them.
It鈥檚 also a reminder of the thinly-veiled racism that underlies these policies. Ramon Torres is a U.S. citizen. He owns a home. He has a driver鈥檚 license and other forms of proof of his identity. But he was held in jail because of his Latinx name and the color of his skin.
Our lawsuit asks the court to declare these actions unconstitutional and to award damages to Torres for what he endured. But more broadly, we must also continue the fight against all forms of anti-immigrant bias and discrimination. The safety and wellbeing of our communities depend on it.