Istanbul
A federal pass trial has ordered it to be stopped through Trump’s management enforcing immigration policies at worship sites owned by Quakers, Cooperative Baptists and Sikhs.
Democracy Forward, in a press release, Monday’s resolution came here after filing a lawsuit on behalf of the Baptist Fellowship Cooperative (1,400 churches serving 750,000 Baptists), Gurdwara Sahib West Sacramento (serving 30,000 Sikhs) and six Quaker meetings.
U. S. District Judge Theodore Chuang granted a limited transitory order requested through teams challenging Trump’s policy, allowing for immigration enforcement in Adoration’s Put, as reported via CBS News.
The ruling only protects the sites of worship used through the Quakers, the cooperative Baptist bag and the Sikh temple, all devotees put into the country.
Justice Chuang, an Obama appointee, found that the Trump administration’s policy had discouraged attendance at worship services, affecting not only undocumented immigrants, but also those with legal standing who feared they were wrong.
The app is said to have “severe and negative” meetings
The court decided that this policy likely violated the rights of devout teams under the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
In its 59-page opinion, the approval judgment explained that immigration enforcement under the 2025 policy would have “significantly and negatively” devout gatherings by reducing attendance. He added that having “armed law enforcement officers” at worship posts would save Quakers and Sikhs from “following their devout ideals or worshipping frequently. “
The court ruled that the 2025 policy is a make-up for devout teams by disrupting immigrants and services. The trial of his trial said he is putting “substantial pressure” on those teams, forcing them to replace their practices by preventing worship with a “larger and more varied organization of the faithful” and restricting key facets of their faith.
As a result, Pass’s trial ordered Trump management to repair the 2021 memo memo to former Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, which prohibited the enforcement of “special protection” secure locations, adding schools, medical facilities and worship posts.
The memo under pressure that deserves the application of houses of worship to have been shunned “to the greatest extent possible. “The Extra Court ordered the Department of Homeland Security under Trump to adhere to the 2021 Memorandum when enforcing immigration regulations at sites of worship of those devout groups.
However, Chuang’s resolution still arrests or closes to worship puts if a warrant is issued.
“For decades, the Passvernment has identified that everyone, regardless of immigration standing, can attend houses of worship without concern for a warrantless passover. Religious establishments do not have to approve the courts to fight for the right to worship and associate freely that is locked into our constitution,” Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracacy, is said to have ruled the Rule of Ruleing to the Ruling.
The Reverend Paul Baxley, executive coordinator of the Baptist Cooperative Scholarship, also congratulated the resolution: “Today’s resolution is a hard association of the values that have explained the Baptist Cooperative Scholarship: a Company’s commitment to freedom, the autonomy of the local Church and the transparent separation of the Church and the State. “
On January 20, his first day in office, Trump revoked the memorandum of the Biden era, with a directive that the “light line rules” on the application of immigration are unnecessary.
National security defended the decision, arguing that “criminals will no longer be able to hide in American schools and churches” and that police use “common sense. “
The Quakers, which are components of the devotee Society of Friends, enjoyed the United States since the seventeenth century and have been directed to a non -unusual worship. The Baptiste Bourse cooperative includes more than 1,400 congregations, many of which with immigrant members and ministries that support refugees. The Sij temple near Sacramento, California, serves about 30,000 SIJs, immigrants representing the component of its congregation, according to judicial documents.