Tuesday, February 9 Login | Sign Up Featured Links
TXT Twitter KTAR RewardsAll Star Rewards

Groups hopeful about sanctions appeal

by Associated Press (November 3rd, 2009 @ 4:24pm)

Bookmark and Share
PHOENIX - Groups trying to overturn an Arizona law that prohibits employers from knowingly hiring illegal immigrants are encouraged that the U.S. Supreme Court has expressed an interest in their appeal.

The court normally agrees to take on only a small number of appeals, and it hasn't yet decided whether it will hear the business and civil rights groups' appeal of the law. But the justices on Monday asked the U.S. solicitor general - the lawyer who argues the Obama administration's cases before the court - to submit a brief in the case.

Julie Pace, a lawyer representing the business groups, said the court's request probably improves her clients' chances of getting heard by the nation's top court. ``That usually means that they realized that this decision impacts the federal government and they want it to express its views,'' Pace said.

The state's employer sanctions law, passed in 2007 to help reduce the economic incentive for immigrants to sneak into the country, has been upheld by a federal district court and a federal appellate court. Employer sanctions laws from Oklahoma and Hazleton, Pa., are awaiting rulings by federal appellate courts.

Under the Arizona law, businesses found to have knowingly hired illegal immigrants can have their business licenses suspended or revoked. The law, which doesn't carry criminal penalties, also requires employers to verify the work eligibility of new workers through a federal database.

Although authorities have examined dozens of cases, no businesses have faced civil actions for illegal hirings in the 22 months that the law has been in effect. One difficulty cited in bringing cases against employers is prosecutors' lack of civil subpoena power to make suspected violators hand over records and give testimony.

The law has prompted or contributed to an unknown number of illegal immigrants' leaving Arizona for their home countries or other states.

The business and civil rights groups argued the law is an unconstitutional attempt by the state to regulate immigration and that cracking down on such hirings is the sole responsibility of the federal government.

Supporters of the law argued state punishments were needed because the federal government hasn't adequately enforced a federal law that already prohibits employers from knowingly hiring illegal immigrants.

Arizona Solicitor General Mary O'Grady, who is defending the law on behalf of the state, declined through a spokeswoman to comment Tuesday.

O'Grady argued in court papers that the Supreme Court shouldn't hear the appeal because the lower courts decided the case correctly and that there aren't differing opinions from lower circuit appellate courts on the subject for the high court to resolve.

``This court's ordinary practice in such a situation is to wait and see whether a circuit conflict arises. Nothing the (U.S.) solicitor general might say about this case can change that,'' O'Grady wrote.

Last 5 Comments

  • why
    jmassagli
    do you illegals and supporters have to believe in getting things for free? citizenship is a privelege not a right. first thing an illegal does when he/she gets here is have a few kids and get on welfare. my ancestry went thru the proper channels even on my mexican side. on my italian side my greatgrandfather had to fight a war in north africa to become a citizen so that he could come here because they quit takin people from italy. maybe you illegals should go to iraq and afghanistan !?
  • Perhaps Arpaio can supply the missing
    abogada987
    investigative element that this law failed to give him. Just as he has told national media outlets that he pick an illegal immigrant out of a crowd of people just by looking at him, so to should he use those uncanny powers to pick employers of illegal immgrants out of a AZ. Chamber of Commerce meeting. Never one to be deterred by a lack of legal authority, Arpaio can develop a system of employer profiling that will withstand civil rights scrutiny.
  • As every red-blooded conservative Arizonan
    abogada987
    knows, there's got to be something wrong if you find yourself agreeting with the far left leaning 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
  • well well
    arnoldd
    things are looking good arpaio is going down this law is gona get overturned yes baby touchdown!!!im happy for the good things that are happening shaooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!
  • who
    jmassagli
    do we contact or can we contact about this?
  • Read More Comments