ACLU Statement on Senate Advancing Laken Riley Act to Final Vote

January 17, 2025 1:00 pm

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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate voted today to advance S. 5, the Laken Riley Act, teeing the bill up for a final vote on Monday. The first immigration bill of the new Congress, the proposed law would require the government to detain people who pose no risk to their communities. Under the bill, individuals would be mandatorily locked up – potentially for years – because at some point in their lives, perhaps decades ago, they were accused of nonviolent offenses like shoplifting. The bill also invents a novel and dangerous authority that will allow hostile state officials to sue the federal government when they disapprove of an immigration decision or policy, causing even more chaos and inviting politicized lawsuits.

Sarah Mehta, senior border policy counsel with the American Civil Liberties Union, had the following reaction to today’s vote:

“This is an extreme and reactive bill that will authorize the largest expansion of mandatory detention we have seen in decades, sweeping in children, DREAMers, parents of U.S. citizen children, and other longtime members of their communities who even ICE thinks should not be detained.

“While we are disappointed this bill will pass the Senate, it is notable that so many senators opposed it and recognized the need for actual immigration reform — not the chaos and cruelty this legislation will unleash. This legislation offers no solutions to improve our immigration system, and we thank the senators who stood up for immigrant communities and due process and voted against this harmful, expensive bill — a bill that will not make us safer. We need our elected leaders to join these senators who showed political courage and leadership right now, with more attacks on immigrants on the horizon.”

Thirty-five Senate Democrats voted against advancing this bill, which will be voted on by the House next week. In a recent letter to senators, the ACLU outlined how this unprecedented and likely unconstitutional bill would result in a significant spike of racial profiling of longtime residents, potentially sweeping thousands of people into jails and detention centers. The federal government already has expansive authority to detain noncitizens pending deportation proceedings. Requiring mandatory detention of a person accused of theft as retaliation for leaving a partner, or a mother who stole formula and diapers for her newborn baby is nothing more than scapegoating.

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