Court Clears Way for Texas to Enforce Migrant Arrest Law

May 29 (Reuters) – A federal appeals court ⁠on ⁠Friday cleared the way for ⁠Texas authorities to enforce key parts of a law that would ​allow state officials to arrest and deport people suspected of having illegally crossed the U.S.-Mexico border.

A 2-1 ‌panel of the New Orleans-based 5th ‌U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in an order put on hold an injunction a ⁠federal judge ⁠had issued on May 14 in a class-action lawsuit filed by civil ​rights advocates on behalf of thousands of people who could be subject to the law’s provisions.

Austin-based U.S. District Judge David Ezra had issued the injunction after concluding the state law improperly challenged the ​federal government’s long-held power to control immigration, naturalization and deportations.

Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, ⁠who ⁠is running for a seat ⁠in the ​U.S. Senate, quickly appealed, leading to Friday’s order.

The groups representing the plaintiffs — the American Civil ​Liberties Union, its Texas ⁠affiliate and the Texas Civil Rights Project — in a joint statement called Friday’s ruling disappointing and said they “will continue to fight against this abhorrent and blatantly illegal law.”

Paxton’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

The lawsuit had been filed to prevent parts of the 2023 ⁠law from taking effect, after the appeals court in April overturned an earlier injunction ⁠issued during Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration that had prevented the Republican-backed measure known as SB 4 from being enforced.

Republican President Donald Trump’s administration had dropped a case the Biden administration brought challenging the law. Immigrant-rights groups that had also sued pressed on, but the 5th Circuit on a 10-7 vote concluded the organizations lacked legal standing to pursue their case.

The new ACLU-backed lawsuit sought to address that issue by instead suing on behalf of non-citizens who could be subject to ⁠four key provisions of the law.

Those provisions include ones that make it a state crime for someone to reenter the U.S. after deportation, even if they have federal permission to do so or have since obtained a green card, and that give ​magistrate judges in Texas the power to issue deportation orders.

(Reporting by Nate ​Raymond in Boston; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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