Feds oppose merger of immigration law challenges

National News

Lawyers for the U.S. Justice Department oppose a request to merge their challenge to the new Arizona immigration law with a lawsuit by a police officer who also is seeking to overturn the law.

The federal lawyers oppose Phoenix police Officer David Salgado's request to consolidate the cases because they say it would prejudice or delay their challenge.

The officer's attorney had argued that the cases are virtually identical because they claim the state law is trumped by federal immigration law and because both seek to keep the state law from being enforced.

The Justice Department says it's challenging more sections of the law than Salgado and that its contention that the law is trumped by federal law differs from the officer's arguments.

Related listings

  • N.J. gay-marriage case must begin in lower court

    N.J. gay-marriage case must begin in lower court

    National News 07/27/2010

    The push for gay marriage in New Jersey suffered a setback Monday when the state Supreme Court said six gay couples who claim New Jersey has denied them the rights granted to married heterosexual couples must argue their case through the lower courts...

  • Supreme Court to hear Arizona immigration law challenge

    Supreme Court to hear Arizona immigration law challenge

    National News 07/20/2010

    The nation's highest court agreed to decide whether the 2007 state law infringed on federal immigration powers and should be struck down.The law at issue in the case is different from the strict new Arizona immigration law passed earlier this year an...

  • Judicial Vacancies Slow the Wheels of Justice

    Judicial Vacancies Slow the Wheels of Justice

    National News 07/12/2010

    As the Senate prepares to vote on whether Elena Kagan should fill the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court, there remain a substantial number of other vacancies in the nation’s lower federal courts that urgently need filling. Currently, there are about ...

Business News