02/11/10
From Judicial Watch
Trooper Absolved For Detaining Illegal
Immigrants
A state trooper sued for racial profiling after detaining a group of illegal
aliens during a traffic stop has been exonerated by a federal appeals court that
has ruled the officer acted appropriately.
The incident occurred three years ago in Rhode Island when the trooper (Thomas
Chabot) pulled over a van on Richmond’s Route 95 for a traffic violation. The
officer followed department procedure by asking the driver as well as the
passengers in the van for identification. When the driver and more than a dozen
passengers could not provide valid identification Chabot contacted Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials.
Outrage ensued among pro immigrant, civil rights groups that were quick to
accuse the trooper of “egregious racial profiling” and of overstepping his
authority by taking immigration enforcement into his own hands. A federal
lawsuit accused Chabot of violating the illegal immigrants’ constitutional
protection against unreasonable search and seizure and the officer was
investigated by the state.
A federal judge in Rhode Island dismissed the lawsuit in 2008, ruling that
Chabot acted reasonably and with legal justification in all of his actions. The
illegal immigrants, all from Guatemala, appealed to the 1st U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals and this week a three-judge panel determined that the trooper had
probable cause to ask the driver and passengers about their immigration status.
Chabot had reason to question the illegal immigrants and his inquiries amounted
to “mere police questioning,” according to the 1st Circuit’s ruling.
Furthermore, the officer’s pat-down searches of the van’s driver were reasonable
due to the safety concerns presented by the large group of unidentified people,
the ruling also says.
Though brazen, this case is hardly unique. Law enforcement officers around the
country are increasingly being sued for violating the constitutional rights of
illegal immigrants. In the last few months alone legal action has been taken
against an Ohio sheriff deputy who helped deport a Mexican with false
identification cards, a Maryland officer who arrested an illegal Salvadoran
woman and federal agents who apprehended a group of illegal aliens in a
Connecticut immigration raid.
Just last week a group of undocumented day laborers sued a southern California
city (Costa Mesa) for banning them from seeking work on public streets. The
lawsuit actually stems from the arrest by local police of a dozen illegal alien
day laborers who violated the city’s anti-solicitation ordinance.
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A policeman's job is to protect honest members of society from individuals who break the laws.
Illegal immigration is illegal. Do you comprehend that?
I do not believe in the abortion of fetuses. However, I am leaning in favor of retro-active abortion of some members of society. They should be selected by an Intelligence test, an American civics test and a political attitude test. If they fail the testing, they will have the option of moving to the socialist paradise country of their choice. If they wish to stay in the U.S., they will be environmentally recycled as crop fertilizer.