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Pima County adopts resolutions limiting civil immigration enforcement on county property and calling for federal agents to show identification
Summary
The Pima County Board of Supervisors on Feb. 4 approved two related resolutions restricting warrantless civil immigration enforcement on county-owned property and urging visible identification for federal agents, passing both 4–1 after debate over legal scope and enforcement mechanisms.
The Pima County Board of Supervisors approved two resolutions on Feb. 4 that limit how federal civil immigration enforcement may use county property and call for clear identification of federal agents during enforcement actions.
The first resolution prohibits county departments, agencies, officers or employees from providing consent for civil immigration enforcement activities on county‑owned, leased, or operated facilities absent a valid arrest warrant signed by a federal or state judicial officer. The second urges that federal agents engaged in civil immigration enforcement wear visible agency affiliation and unique identifiers and discourages mask use that would prevent identification.• Both measures passed by roll call with four votes in favor and one opposed.
Supporters, led by Supervisor Scott, framed the actions as a policy protecting public access to county…
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