Judge 'offended' by Florida AG's immigration arrest defiance
Left: Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier (Office of Attorney General). Right: U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams (American Bar Association/YouTube).

Left: Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier (Office of Attorney General). Right: U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams (American Bar Association/YouTube).

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has responded to a federal judge’s threat of holding him in contempt for defying an order to halt local immigration arrests. He expressed that the state would vigorously defend its laws and refused to instruct law enforcement to cease carrying out their constitutional duties.

On Friday, Uthmeier stated his belief that Florida authorities were within their rights to continue with the local immigration arrests, despite the order issued by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams. He affirmed his intent to persist in this course of action.

“We believe the court has overstepped and lacks jurisdiction there, and I will not tell law enforcement to stop fulfilling their constitutional duties,” Uthmeier told Fox News.

“I do not believe an AG should be held in contempt for respecting the rule of law and appropriate separation of powers,” the attorney general added. “The ACLU is dead set on obstructing President Donald Trump’s efforts to detain and deport illegals, and we are going to fight back. We will vigorously defend our laws and advance President Trump’s agenda on illegal immigration.”

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Williams, a Barack Obama appointee, issued a 14-day stay on April 4 that blocked a law signed into effect by Gov. Ron DeSantis in February, which gave state law enforcement the power to arrest and prosecute undocumented immigrants. It is now a first-degree misdemeanor for a person to enter Florida as an “unauthorized alien.”

Williams ordered that the law not be enforced in Florida, arguing that it was the federal government’s responsibility to apprehend and litigate migrants, not individual states.

Uthmeier initially directed authorities in the Sunshine State to stop immigration arrests from being carried out, but he reworded his directive just days later — saying he actually “cannot prevent” the arrests from happening, according to the Miami Herald. Williams lashed out at Uthmeier and his legal team at a hearing last Tuesday and demanded answers.

“I’m not offended by someone disagreeing with me or my order,” Williams said, according to local ABC affiliate WPLG.

“What I am offended by is someone saying, ‘You don’t have to abide by it!’” she told Uthmeier’s lawyers.

Multiple arrests have been carried out in violation of Williams’ order, according to the judge and local media outlets.

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On Wednesday, Uthmeier’s attorneys filed a motion to pause Williams’ ruling while they appeal. They argued that the plaintiffs in the Uthmeier case have failed to “allege sufficient facts” to know whether they are “presently engaging, or will imminently engage” in conduct that will lead to charges under the new law. The AG is being sued by the Florida Immigrant Coalition, Farmworker Association of Florida and two women who allegedly lack permanent legal status.

“At best, they allege speculative travel plans,” the motion said. “Nor do they have any legally protected interest in vindicating illegal, unrelated conduct,” it charged.

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