| Written by R. Cort Kirkwood | 
| Monday, 08 August 2011 09:56 | 
Sixteen nations, all of them sources of illegal aliens who cross Mexico’s border into the United States, have filed briefs concurring with the U.S. Justice Department’s lawsuit against Alabama to block the enforcement of the state’s newly passed immigration law. The briefs claim the law, HB 56, impedes the relations between the United States and those nations, the Montgomery Advertiser reports.
Along with the Justice Department’s attack on Alabama, another challenge to the law came from the usual coalition of open-borders advocates, including Mobile's Roman Catholic archbishop, who has used the issue to press the case that tough immigration laws are inherently racist.
A federal judge has consolidated the lawsuits.
The Briefs
According to the Advertiser, the briefs say the law threatens the rights of the illegals. Leading the charge, unsurprisingly, is Mexico, whose brief stated, "Mexico has an interest in protecting its citizens and ensuring that their ethnicity is not used as a basis for state-sanctioned acts of bias and discrimination."
As for the other countries, they’re just interested in fair treatment, their lawyer says. Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay joined in one brief, the paper reported.
"They want to make sure their citizens are  treated correctly, and they have a sovereign interest in the way in  which immigration law is carried out by the United States," said Edward  Still, a Birmingham attorney who filed the briefs on behalf of the  nations. "They want to have one immigration law and not 50."
Alabama passed HB 56 in June. As The New American reported, the law is matter of fiscal self defense for the state. Illegals cost Alabamians $298 million annually, the Federation for American Immigration Reform reports.
Addressing those costs, the bill ends public welfare and some public education benefits for illegals. Schools must collect information on illegal-alien children. Employers must verify the eligility of employees to work in the United States. The bill punishes anyone who harbors or tranports illegals.
The bill also requires the state Attorney General to negotiate a memorandum of understanding about immigration law between Alabama and the Departments of Justice or Homeland Security. Voters must prove they are citizens before casting ballots.
The codicil that upset the radical left, however, is that which mirrors Arizona’s law, which a federal judge invalidated. Alabama police are required to check the immigration status of anyone arrested for an offense that requires bail. Police must detain anyone whose immigration status they doubt.
Local governments and officials must help enforce federal or state immigration laws by notifying federal authorities when criminal illegals are in custody, HB 56 says, and it forbids state and local officials from refusing to cooperate in the enforcement of state and federal immigration laws.
Leftists Go Ballistic
After Gov. Robert Bentley signed HB 56 into law, opponents quickly counterattacked with a lawsuit to stop the bill from taking effect. The widely discredited leftist Southern Poverty Law Center claimed the law “perpetuates bigotry.”
This ill-advised bill undermines our core  American values of fairness and equality. By perpetuating the hate  rhetoric that has become commonplace among many elected officials, this  bill threatens the rights of citizens and non-citizens alike. H.B. 56  attacks workers trying to make a better life for their families, divides  communities, and places Alabama, once again, on the wrong side of  history.
The American Civil Liberties Union fretted that it legalized racial profiling.”
Immigration status is not something you  can accurately determine based on a brief observation or interaction,  but this law pretends otherwise. It invites profiling on the basis of  race, ethnicity, and language. Subjecting people to harassment,  investigation and arrest because they are perceived to be foreign is  contrary to who we are as Americans
In its lawsuit, ACLU argued that HB 56 is flatly unconstitutional and trespasses, for instance, the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
[T]the law, HB 56, unconstitutionally  subjects Alabamians — including countless U.S. citizens and lawful  permanent residents — to unlawful search and seizure, in violation of  the Fourth Amendment. The lawsuit also charges the law  unconstitutionally deters immigrant families from enrolling their  children in public schools; bars many lawfully present immigrants from  attending public colleges or universities in Alabama; drastically  restricts the right to enter into contracts; and interferes with federal  power and authority over immigration matters, in violation of the  Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The draconian law is even  more restrictive than the Arizona law it was inspired by.
The Obama administration joined the attack this month. The Justice Department argues the same as what it argued in its successful lawsuit against Arizona’s tough immigration law: that Alabama is usurping federal authority.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder insisted that immigration enforcement is his job, not Alabama’s:
Today’s action makes clear that setting  immigration policy and enforcing immigration laws is a national  responsibility that cannot be addressed through a patchwork of state  immigration laws. The department is committed to evaluating each state  immigration law and making decisions based on the facts and the law. To  the extent we find state laws that interfere with the federal  government’s enforcement of immigration law, we are prepared to bring  suit, as we did in Arizona.
DOJ argues that “that various provisions of H.B. 56 conflict with federal immigration law and undermine the federal government’s careful balance of immigration enforcement priorities and objectives.” As well, DOJ complained,
Alabama’s law is designed to affect  virtually every aspect of an unauthorized immigrant’s daily life, from  employment to housing to transportation to entering into and enforcing  contracts to going to school.
H.B. 56 further criminalizes mere unlawful  presence and, like Arizona’s law, expands the opportunities for Alabama  police to push aliens toward incarceration for various new immigration  crimes by enforcing an immigration status verification system. …
[T]he mandates that H.B. 56 imposes on  Alabama law enforcement may also result in the harassment and detention  of foreign visitors, legal immigrants and even U.S. citizens who may not  be able to readily prove their lawful status. In addition, H.B. 56 will  place significant burdens on federal agencies, diverting their  resources away from dangerous criminal aliens and other high-priority  targets. In addition to interfering with law enforcement, H.B. 56  imposes further burdens on children by demanding that students prove  their lawful presence, which could discourage parents from enrolling  their children in school.
The question is whether the federal judge who hears this case will concur that Alabama has no power to protect itself from the fiscal, cultural, and criminal depredations of the illegal alien horde that costs state taxpayers $300 million annually.
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