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Saturday 16 November 2019

Dictator Judge Bans ICE From Arresting Illegal Aliens In Oregon Courthouses

Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, Martha Walters, has arbitrarily decreed that I.C.E. agents from arresting illegal aliens in courthouses.
Oregon Supreme Court Chief Justice Martha Walters enacted a new rule Thursday that will make it harder for immigration agents to make civil arrests in the state’s courthouses.
The new rule requires U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to have a signed judicial warrant if they plan to enter a courthouse to make an arrest. In the past, ICE agents have used administrative warrants that are signed by other ICE officers, rather than a neutral third party, like a judge.
The new rule follows a petition that was sent to the court by immigrants’ rights groups in December 2018. They have argued, among other things, that immigration arrests around and near courthouses puts a chilling effect on those seeking access to the justice system.
“Adopting this rule protects the integrity of the state judicial process and will allow state courts to fully hold accountable people accused of a crime,” Walters said in a release. “Arrests in courthouses have interfered with judicial proceedings and removed criminal defendants before they have been sentenced or completed their sentences. We are adopting this rule to maintain the integrity of our courts and provide access to justice — not to advance or oppose any political or policy agenda.”
The rule also bans civil immigration arrests in courthouses, their parking lots, sidewalks and entryways, unless a judge has signed an arrest warrant.
Oregon is the third state, after New York and New Jersey, to issue a statewide court rule. California lawmakers passed a rule that offers similar protections to immigrants, according to the ACLU of Oregon.
Immigration advocates have criticized ICE’s courthouse arrests, especially in Multnomah and Washington counties, where high-profile arrests have happened in recent years.
As a result of the ruling, “our clients, witnesses and other courtgoers can participate in our judicial system without fear of being arrested and detained by ICE,” said Carl McPherson, executive director of Metropolitan Public Defender. “By issuing this rule, the chief justice has ensured that access to our courts is protected for all people regardless of their immigration status.”
Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum applauded the ruling and said courthouses should be treated like schools, places of worship, hospitals and other sensitive places where immigration arrests typically do not happen.
ICE officials quickly criticized the ruling Thursday.
“It is ironic that elected officials want to see policies in place to keep ICE out of courthouses, while caring little for laws enacted by Congress to keep criminal aliens out of our country,” ICE spokesperson Tanya Roman said in a statement.
Roman said ICE would continue to carry out its duties and “consider carefully whether to refer those who obstruct our lawful enforcement efforts for criminal prosecution.”
The U.S. district attorney’s office in Oregon, which prosecutes immigration cases in the state, declined to comment on the ruling.
While there is a public comment period between mid-December and April, the rule is currently in effect.

Martha Lee Walters, chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, seated with some of her colleagues. Photo by Willamette University.
The judges and attorneys of the “uniform trial court rules committee” who recommended this rule consist of:
Wells B. Ashby, Deschutes County Circuit Court
Stephen K. Bushong, Multnomah County Circuit Court
Dominic M. Campanella, Attorney, Medford
Craig M. Cowley, Attorney, Portland


Andrew R. Erwin, Washington County Circuit Court
Bryan B. Francesconi, Attorney, Portland
W. Eugene Hallman, Attorney, Pendleton

Jeffrey A. Howes, Attorney, Portland
Linda Hukari, Trial Court Administrator, Marion County Circuit Court
Lung S. Hung, Malheur County Circuit Court​
Zachary L. Mazer, Attorney, Salem
Tracy A. Prall, Marion County Circuit Court
Janet Schroer, Committee Chair, Attorney, Portland
Charles M. Zennaché, Lane County Circuit Court
You may recall that a judge in Multnomah County (home to Portland) helped an illegal alien evade ICE a couple of years ago by ushering him into her chambers and leading him out a different exit.
Portland was also the city where illegal alien Sergio Martinez went on a rape and robbery spree. Martinez has previously been deported 20 times.
And all with the protection of not only Multnomah County “Sheriff” Mike Reese, but also Governor Kate Brown, state Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, and Multnomah county presiding judge Nan Waller, all of whom testified in favor the sanctuary state bill at the state capitol in 2017.

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