The U.S. Supreme Court has for the second time extended its stay of a controversial Texas law that would allow state and local police to arrest people they suspect of crossing the border illegally.
A group of migrants seeking U.S. asylum walk down a road beside the Rio Grande River to turn themselves in to the Border Patrol.
Due to the two prior pauses handed down by the Supreme Court, Texas' law has been on pause since March 4. The prior stay was set to expire Monday at 5 p.m. case that it violates the U.S. government's constitutional ability to carry out immigration enforcement. The groups that sued over the legislation — the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Texas and the Texas Civil Rights Project — also caution it will lead to increased racial profiling and discrimination.
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