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Judge voids Pa. city’s illegal immigration law

A federal judge on Thursday struck down the city of Hazleton's tough crackdown on illegal immigrants, ruling unconstitutional a law that has been emulated by towns and cities around the nation.
A Hazleton crowd rallies in June to support Mayor Lou Barletta, who passed the Illegal Immigration Relief Act. The law would have imposed fines on landlords who rent to illegal immigrants and denied business permits to companies that give them jobs.
A Hazleton crowd rallies in June to support Mayor Lou Barletta, who passed the Illegal Immigration Relief Act. The law would have imposed fines on landlords who rent to illegal immigrants and denied business permits to companies that give them jobs. Steve Klaver / AP file
/ Source: The Associated Press

A federal judge on Thursday struck down the city of Hazleton's tough crackdown on illegal immigrants, ruling unconstitutional a law that has been emulated by towns and cities around the United States.

The Illegal Immigration Relief Act sought to impose fines on landlords who rent to illegal immigrants and deny business permits to companies that give them jobs. Another measure would have required tenants to register with City Hall and pay for a rental permit. It was pushed by the Pennsylvania city's Republican mayor last summer after two illegal immigrants were charged in a fatal shooting.

Hispanic groups and illegal immigrants sued in federal court to overturn the measures, saying they usurp the federal government's exclusive power to regulate immigration, deprive residents of their constitutional rights to equal protection and due process, and violate state and federal housing law.

"This decision should be a blaring red stoplight for local officials thinking of copying Hazleton's misguided and unconstitutional law," said Witold Walczak, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, which represented the plaintiffs.

Other cities mimic
More than 90 communities across the U.S., frustrated by the Congressional impasse on dealing with illegal immigrants, have considered or approved measures similar to Hazleton's. U.S. District Judge James Munley's ruling does not affect those measures.

Munley said Hazleton's act was pre-empted by federal law and violated the plaintiffs' due process rights.

"Whatever frustrations ... the city of Hazleton may feel about the current state of federal immigration enforcement, the nature of the political system in the United States prohibits the city from enacting ordinances that disrupt a carefully drawn federal statutory scheme," Munley wrote in a 206-page opinion.

"Even if federal law did not conflict with Hazleton's measures, the city could not enact an ordinance that violates rights the Constitution guarantees to every person in the United States, whether legal resident or not," he added.

Overwhelming presence
Mayor Lou Barletta, chief proponent of the crackdown, contends illegal immigrants have brought drugs, crime and gangs to the city of more than 30,000, overwhelming police, schools and hospitals.

Hispanic immigrants began settling in large numbers in Hazleton several years ago, lured from New York, Philadelphia and other cities by the city's cheap housing, low crime and the availability of work in nearby factories and farms.

The city, situated 80 miles northwest of Philadelphia, estimates its population increased by more than 10,000 between 2000 and 2006.

Testimony during the nine-day trial pegged the city's illegal immigrant population at between 1,500 and 3,400.