Supreme Court Clears Path For ICE Roving Patrols to Proceed In California

The Supreme Court has sided with Donald Trump’s administration, allowing immigration officials to continue what critics call “roving patrols” across parts of Southern California. The decision reverses rulings from lower courts that said the stops likely violated Fourth Amendment protections.

The ruling arrived without a written explanation from the court’s majority, though all three liberal justices dissented. At the heart of the dispute were multiple reports of heavily armed and masked ICE agents stopping Latino residents, including U.S. citizens, in and around Los Angeles to question them about their immigration status. Lower courts had determined that ICE failed to meet the “reasonable suspicion” standard required for such detentions.

While the ruling only applies to seven counties in Southern California, it lands during a broader push by Trump to intensify immigration enforcement, raising concerns that federal officials will see it as approval for similar operations elsewhere.

The Department of Homeland Security praised the outcome. “This is a win for the safety of Californians and the rule of law,” said DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin. “DHS law enforcement will not be slowed down and will continue to arrest and remove the murderers, rapists, gang members, and other criminal illegal aliens.”

Just two months earlier, a U.S. District Court had ordered DHS to stop the practice when stops were based mainly on ethnicity, language, or being present in certain areas like farms or bus stops. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals largely upheld that ruling. But the Supreme Court rejected that approach.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, siding with Trump in a concurring opinion, argued that while ethnicity alone cannot establish suspicion, it can be considered along with other circumstances. “To be clear, apparent ethnicity alone cannot furnish reasonable suspicion; under this court’s case law regarding immigration stops, however, it can be a ‘relevant factor’ when considered along with other salient factors,” Kavanaugh wrote.

The decision underscores the ongoing divide over how far federal immigration authorities can go in targeting communities while navigating constitutional boundaries.