Friday, July 28, 2023

Can New Jersey Ban Alien Detention?

IRLI shows full court that state law is unconstitutional

WASHINGTON—The Immigration Reform Law Institute (IRLI) has filed a brief before a New Jersey federal district court in a case challenging a New Jersey law banning private contractors from operating federal alien detention centers in the state. Both in New Jersey and around the country, the federal government relies on private contractors to house aliens who have violated federal law but have elected to stay in the country in detention while fighting their deportation.

 

In its brief, IRLI shows that the New Jersey law is preempted under the Constitution's Supremacy Clause because it intentionally interferes with this federal contracting program, which immigration statutes expressly contemplate, and that no "presumption against preemption" applies because immigration is exclusively an area of federal concern.

 

IRLI also shows that the law discriminates against the federal government, in violation of the immunity doctrine, by allowing privately-run facilities that serve state purposes while banning those that serve federal purposes.

 

In enacting its detention ban, New Jersey followed in the footsteps of California. But last year, at IRLI's urging, the full Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting en banc, struck down California's ban on private detention.

 

"With this law, New Jersey aims to cripple our nation's immigration law enforcement, which relies so heavily on federal contractors to house detainees," said Dale L. Wilcox, executive director and general counsel of IRLI. "The problem is, the very purpose of this law is what makes it unconstitutional. We hope the court clearly sees this, just as the Ninth Circuit did, and strikes down this law as flagrantly defying the Constitution."

 

The case is CoreCivic, Inc. v. Murphy, No. 3:23-cv-00967 (D.N.J.).