Alabama lawmakers have passed legislation that would make it a felony to knowingly bring someone into the state who is in the U.S. illegally, echoing similar bills nationwide that could restrict domestic travel for some immigrants, reported The Associated Press.
The legislation given final approval Wednesday protects “not
only the citizens of Alabama but also the people that are immigrating here
legally and doing everything the right way,” said the bill’s Republican
sponsor, Sen. Wes Kitchens.
The measure carves out exemptions for medical professionals
such as ambulance drivers and employees for law firms, educators, churches or
charitable organizations carrying out “non-commercial” tasks. The bill also
outlines a process for law enforcement to determine whether a person who is
arrested is in the country legally. It now goes to Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who
has 10 days to sign the legislation or else it fails by a pocket veto.
Alabama joins at least nine other states that have
considered legislation this year that would create crimes of transporting
immigrants who are unlawfully in the U.S., according to an Associated
Press analysis using the bill-tracking software Plural. It’s one
of many
recent bills passed by conservative statehouses seeking to aid
President Donald Trump’s crackdown on immigration.
Activists say Alabama could end up ensnaring people who
provide transportation across state lines for essential services, such federal
immigration court hearings in New Orleans and Atlanta, mandatory trips to
out-of-state consulates and visits to family.
Jordan Stallworth, 38, works as a civic engagement
coordinator for the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice and lives in
Wedowee, Alabama, a rural town of about 800 people that is just a 20-minute
drive from Georgia. His wife has relatives living without legal status in both
states and he often assists family members and other immigrants in the
community with transportation.
Recently, he drove a family member lacking legal status to
the maternity ward in Carrollton, Georgia, 35 miles (56 kilometers) away, since
the local hospital doesn’t have one. Stallworth worries that similar trips will
be criminalized.
“I’m not gonna sit here and somebody’s dying in front of me
just to have a baby — I’m not gonna sit here and just let her die, family or
not,” Stallworth said.
Federal law already makes it a crime to knowingly transport
someone who is in the U.S. illegally. That law has been used in border areas
against drivers picking up people who illegally cross into the U.S. But it has
not historically been used for minor things like giving someone a ride to the
grocery store, said Kathleen Campbell Walker, a longtime immigration attorney
in El Paso, Texas.
But immigrant advocates are watching to see whether that
changes under Trump.
“The likelihood of that being enforced is higher now because
of the focus on removing undocumented people from the United States,” Walker said.
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