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Rhode Island ACLU Sues over Arrests of Immigrants Resulting from Racial Profiling

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 21, Issue 1, February 20, 2007


    The Rhode Island Affiliate of the ACLU has filed a federal lawsuit against the Rhode Island State Police, challenging the legality of the detention and transporting to immigration officials of 14 Guatemalan nationals who were stopped in a van on I-95 on July 11, 2006, after the driver changed lanes without using a turn signal.  The lawsuit, filed Jan. 8, 2007, on behalf of eleven of those detained, argues that the actions by the state police violated the state’s Racial Profiling Prevention Act, as well as the driver’s and passengers’ constitutional rights to be free from discrimination and from unreasonable searches and seizures.

    According to the ACLU’s presentation of the facts, the state trooper who stopped the van first confirmed that the driver’s registration and license were valid and that he had no criminal record.  The trooper nevertheless opened the vehicle’s doors and, with the driver interpreting, asked all the passengers to also present their IDs.  When some did not produce any, the trooper asked them if they had any documents demonstrating that they were U.S. citizens, and no one was able to produce any.  Ultimately, the trooper advised the passengers that they all would be escorted to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Providence.  According to the complaint, he instructed the driver that if any passenger attempted to escape from the van en route to Providence, the passenger would be shot.

    The suit argues that the defendants “knew or should have known that the search, seizure and detention of the Plaintiffs were without reasonable or probable cause and were therefore unlawful under the circumstances.”  The suit seeks a declaratory judgment that the defendants violated the constitutional rights of the driver and passengers, and an award of damages and attorneys’ fees.

 

 

 

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