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cbabe

(6,727 posts)
Sun Apr 26, 2026, 11:58 AM 17 hrs ago

New Mexico Becomes the Latest State to End Cooperation With ICE Under New Law

https://truthout.org/articles/new-mexico-becomes-the-latest-state-to-end-cooperation-with-ice-under-new-law/

New Mexico Becomes the Latest State to End Cooperation With ICE Under New Law

Activists say ending local and state cooperation with ICE is a key way to obstruct Trump’s mass deportation machine.

By Marianne Dhenin , TRUTHOUT
Published April 26, 2026

Grassroots coalitions in a growing number of states are working to pass legislation to cut municipal or state ties to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The efforts are gaining momentum as the Trump administration’s mass deportation agenda throws long-standing problems with the nation’s immigration regime into sharp relief.

“We see a tremendous upswelling of this type of legislation being proposed in different states across the country,” Rebecca Sheff, a staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico, told Truthout. “I think it speaks to the moment that it’s really a time to make the most of the political willingness to take bold action in light of how aggressive ICE has become.”

Sheff helped draft New Mexico’s Immigrant Safety Act, which Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed into law in February. The law prohibits state and local governments from entering into agreements to detain individuals for civil immigration violations, stops the use of public land for immigration detention, and bans agreements that turn local law enforcement into immigration agents. It will come into force in May.

Comparable laws to curb civil immigration detention are already on the books in at least half a dozen other states, including New Jersey, California, Washington, Illinois, Colorado, and Maryland. Many have been passed under the banner “Dignity, Not Detention,” following a national campaign launched in 2010 by the Detention Watch Network and hundreds of supporting organizations nationwide. California was the first to pass its Dignity, Not Detention legislation seven years later. New Mexico’s is the most recent.

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