Obama admin. sues to block Alabama immigration law

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The Obama administration yesterday sued to block enforcement of Alabama’s new immigration  law, widely considered to be the toughest measure in the United  States to try to crack down on illegal immigrants.

The law, known as H.B. 56, was signed by Republican  Governor Robert Bentley in June and is due to take effect on  Sept. 1. Civil rights groups brought a separate lawsuit  challenging the law about a month ago.

“If allowed to go into effect, H.B. 56’s enforcement scheme  will conflict with and undermine the federal government’s  careful balance of immigration enforcement priorities and  objectives,” administration lawyers said.

“The scheme will cause the detention and harassment of  authorized visitors, immigrants, and citizens who do not have  or carry identification documents specified by the statute, or  who otherwise will be swept into the ambit of H.B. 56’s  enforcement-at-all-costs approach,” according to the lawsuit  filed in federal court in Alabama.

The administration argued that federal law preempted the  state from adopting its own immigration regime and would  interfere with the federal immigration system. There are an  estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States.

Conservatives have complained that the Obama administration  has failed to sufficiently stop the flow of illegal immigrants  into the country. Attempts to overhaul federal immigration  policy have gone nowhere in the U.S. Congress.

Besides Alabama, Georgia, Arizona, Utah and Indiana are  defending new immigration laws in federal court. The Obama  administration successfully sued to block Arizona’s tough law  last year.