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Changes to the petition
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Lūgums ir adresēts: Alabama Legislature
To: The Sponsors of HB13 and the Alabama Legislature
Re: Opposition to HB13 and its expansion of immigration-enforcement powers:
We, the undersigned Alabama residents and stakeholders, oppose HB13 in its current form. The bill would authorize state and local law enforcement to collaborate with federal agencies to enforce federal immigration laws, detain, remove, or investigate individuals based on immigration status, and allow arrests with probable cause or reasonable suspicion under such arrangements. This expansion risks civil liberties, erodes public trust, and diverts limited resources from core public safety duties.
Why HB13 should not be enacted:
Civil liberties and trust: Expanding immigration enforcement by local officers threatens constitutional rights and undermines trust in police, particularly in immigrant communities.
Public safety: Fear of policing based on immigration status may deter crime reporting and cooperation with investigations.
Fiscal and practical burden: Implementing federal–state collaborations requires new training, oversight, and administrative costs. Our local law enforcement agencies are stretched thin. Local officers need to focus on local crime and safety issues; they should not be focused on federal immigration enforcement. This bill weakens their ability to respond to the needs of the communities they serve.
Legal, jurisdictional and accountability concerns: Greater exposure to civil rights lawsuits and unclear accountability for local agencies. Creating parallel immigration enforcement by state/local officers can complicate and undermine the coordination of federal immigration policy
What we urge:
Do not pass HB13 in its current form.
Do not permit state/local officers, under MOUs with federal agencies, to inquire about immigration status beyond established criminal enforcement or to conduct immigration investigations without explicit, narrow limits and strong due-process protections.
If any inquiry is allowed, ensure it is restricted to specific criminal investigations, with guaranteed rights to counsel, and independent oversight to prevent profiling or civil rights violations.
Thank you for considering the public safety and civil liberties of all Alabama residents.
House Bill 13 would continue the dangerous and un-Constitutional expansion of federal immigration authority like we have seen in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Minneapolis to our own cities in Alabama, and it must be opposed. The bill would enable state and local law enforcement agencies to enter into memorandums of agreement with any federal agency “for the purpose of enforcing federal immigration and customs laws and the detention, removal, and investigation of illegal aliens and the immigration status of any individual in this state.” The state’s attorney general already has the authority to enter these agreements with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and there is no need to deputize local police to assist, especially with the high likelihood of racial profiling and false arrest. This is a grave example of federal government overreach and a threat to civil rights. Much of the public is already opposed to it, and it would be bad for Alabama.
I already know someone who was stopped by the police for a minor traffic infraction by the police. The man (who had simply cut through a gas station parking lot to avoid a long line at the red light) was already approved for a green card, and had his work permit and social security card in his truck, but was not permitted to produce them. Instead, the police officer called ICE based on the man's apparent nationality, and not on his citizenship status which he didn't take the trouble to verify. ICE came and took him, and as of Jan. 29, 2026, he has been in detention for more than two months. He has been unable to support his family, his court case has been rescheduled three times, and he now owes his lawyer more than $10,000. HB 13 would create significantly more of these unlawful incidents which can ruin people's lives, and additionally would cut off legal remedies for the victims.
Public pushes back on bill to expand Alabama law enforcement’s power on immigration at hearing
Bill to allow local police to be de facto ICE agents moves to House
Petīcija uzsākta:
29.01.2026
Kolekcija beidzas:
01.04.2026
Reģions:
Alabama
Kategorija:
Civiltiesības
It’s important to me because there has always been this separation. Cops are here to protect and serve people. Even if you’re an immigrant here on vacation. Even if you’re here unlawfully. An undocumented immigrant may stay in a dangerous abusive environment if they fear they can’t go to the police to make an accusation against a citizen. We’ve already had little kids commit suicide from being threatened to have ICE called on their parents. Ice is more than well funded enough to do their own job. For a fact the police should do all they can to show that they are a separate entirety from ICE.
Vai jums ir sava vietne, emuārs vai viss tīmekļa portāls? Kļūsti par šīs petīcijas aizstāvi un pavairotāju. Mums ir reklāmkarogi, logrīki un API (interfeiss), ko iegult jūsu lapās. Uz instrumentiem
This is not what this country was founded on.