The Trump administration is backing away from a widely cited immigration enforcement target, telling a federal appeals court there is no formal policy requiring agents to arrest 3,000 people a day.
The statement was made in a Justice Department court filing last week, defending the administration’s expanded enforcement campaign in
“The allegation that the government maintains a policy mandating 3,000 arrests per day appears to originate from media reports quoting a White House advisor,”
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The case was brought by LA-area residents, workers and advocacy groups who say immigration agents have been stopping and questioning people based on how they look, what language they speak, or where they happen to be.
In June, the LA region became a flashpoint in the administration’s immigration crackdown, as anti-deportation protests erupted across the city and the Trump administration deployed thousands of California National Guard troops and active-duty Marines to protect federal property and assist ICE agents — a move made against the wishes of Democratic state and local officials.
Plaintiffs in the case pointed to public comments by White House adviser
Last month, Trump border czar
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In its July 30 filing, the Justice Department urged the Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a lower court order limiting enforcement tactics. The administration argued that ICE operations are guided by individual assessments and operational needs, not numerical targets.
But on Friday, a three-judge panel declined to pause the order, meaning the restrictions will remain in effect while the case proceeds. The ruling bars agents from stopping people without reasonable suspicion that they’re in the country unlawfully and prohibits using factors like race, ethnicity, speaking Spanish, certain types of jobs, or being present in areas where migrants often gather — such as parking lots or street corners — as justification for enforcement.
The court battle comes as most Americans say they don’t agree with how the administration is handling immigration. A recent Gallup poll found 62% of US adults disapprove of Trump’s approach on immigration, including 45% who strongly disapprove. Just 35% said they approve.
The case is Vasquez Perdomo v. Noem, 25-4312, US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (San Francisco).
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Sarah McGregor, Brendan Case
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