USA: Supreme Court decision reaffirms the need for humane and comprehensive immigration reform
27 June 2012

A young girl looks toward her brother as they participate in a counseling session with their mother inside the Women's Shelter run by the Kino Border Initiative in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, (Christian Fuchs/JRS)
This decision not only affects all Hispanics in the state of Arizona, but anyone deemed foreign looking is subject to detention and interrogation by law enforcement officers of the state.
Washington DC, 27 June 2012 – The Jesuit Refugee Service USA, the US Jesuit Conference and the Kino Border Initiative welcomed the decision by the Supreme Court on Monday to strike down three key provisions of Arizona's controversial immigration law, SB1070.

"In doing so, the Court correctly recognised the federal government's constitutional authority to regulate immigration", according to the statement issued by the three Jesuit groups.

The segments of the law that were overturned include the rule making it a crime for migrants to seek employment without work permits and also overturned the portion of the law that forced immigrants to carry their ID papers with them at all times. In addition, Arizona police will not be able to arrest someone because they suspect s/he is a deportable immigrant.

However, the court unanimously sustained the law's centrepiece, which requires state law enforcement officials to determine the immigration status of anyone they stop or arrest if they have reason to suspect that the individual might be in the country irregularly.

"We are disappointed, however, that the decision left standing a final provision of the Arizona law, requiring state law enforcement officers to stop and detain without warrant individuals on the sole basis of "reasonable suspicion" of irregular status. We fear this provision places Arizona law enforcement officers at odds with the communities they seek to protect", the statement read.

This decision not only affects all Hispanics in the state of Arizona, but anyone deemed "foreign looking" is subject to detention and interrogation by law enforcement officers of the state. Such laws endanger all residents of Arizona by creating a fear and mistrust of law enforcement and drive immigrant communities further into the shadows by discouraging them from contacting the police when they are victims of crimes.

"The Supreme Court's decision on this provision of the Arizona law acknowledges the potential for future legal challenges, and we are hopeful that the provision will be overturned once the problems associated with it are further documented", the statement continued.

"Through the Kino Border Initiative (a cooperative endeavour between six religious organisations, including JRS USA and two provinces of the Society of Jesus, operating in the twin cities of Nogales, Arizona and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico) we have borne daily witness to the harsh realities of the current broken immigration system", the statement concluded.

The Jesuit Conference, JRS USA, and the Kino Border Initiative have long been committed to a humane and comprehensive approach to immigration reform.

In this spirit, the three groups also welcomed the words of Archbishop José H Gomez of Los Angeles, chairman of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee on Migration in his response to the Supreme Court decision.

"The US Catholic bishops across the nation will urge their state governments not to pursue laws such as in Arizona, but rather to pursue humane reform on the federal level. Humane enforcement of our nation's laws are part of any solution, but enforcement by itself, unjustly administered, only leads to abuses and family breakdown", said the Archbishop.




Press Contact Information
James Stapleton
international.communications@jrs.net
+39 06 69 868 468