By Jim Saunders
 ©2024 The News Service of Florida. All rights reserved; see terms.
     TALLAHASSEE â A federal judge this week stood behind his rulings that Florida could challenge Biden administration immigration policies, after an appeals court ordered him to reconsider the issue.
Pensacola-based U.S. District Judge T. Kent Wetherell released a 10-page decision Tuesday that said Florida had legal standing to challenge federal policies related to undocumented immigrants being released from detention after crossing the countryâs southwest border.
In two rulings last year, Wetherell sided with Florida and said the policies, known as âParole Plus Alternatives to Detentionâ and âParole with Conditions,â violated federal law. The U.S. Department of Justice appealed to the 11th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals.
The Atlanta-based appeals court on Feb. 13 sent the dispute back to Wetherell, citing a U.S. Supreme Court opinion against Texas and Louisiana in a separate immigration case. The appeals court ordered Wetherell to determine whether he had âjurisdictionâ in the Florida case âin light ofâ the U.S. Supreme Court opinion.
Plaintiffs must show standing before judges have jurisdiction to decide cases. So if Florida didnât have standing, Wetherell couldnât have ruled in its favor.
The U.S. Supreme Court decided last year that Texas and Louisiana did not have standing to challenge Biden administration immigration-enforcement policies. But Wetherellâs ruling this week drew distinctions with the Texas case, which he said challenged a U.S. Department of Homeland Security policy about which undocumented immigrants would be arrested and prosecuted.
âThe policies at issue in these (Florida) cases do not involve arrest or prosecution, but rather explain how DHS (the Department of Homeland Security) will exercise its statutory âparoleâ authority ⊠with respect to aliens who are already in DHS custody after arriving at the southwest border,â Wetherell wrote. âNothing in Texas (the U.S. Supreme Court opinion) held that federal courts cannot adjudicate the validity of non-detention/parole policies like these.â
Wetherell, a former state appeals-court judge appointed to the federal bench by former President Donald Trump, also wrote that âthere is nothing extraordinary (or unusual) about the suits filed by Florida challenging DHSâs non-detention/parole policies.â
âThe court (Wetherell) was simply asked in these cases to decide whether the challenged policies complied with the clear and unambiguous terms of the statute that restricted DHSâs authority to âparoleâ aliens into the country who would otherwise be subject to mandatory detention until the completion of their immigration proceedings,â he wrote.
Wetherellâs decision on the standing issue went back to the federal appeals court.
After the Supreme Court ruling in the Texas and Louisiana case, Justice Department attorneys filed a brief arguing the appeals court should reject Floridaâs arguments for similar reasons.
âIn United States v. Texas, the Supreme Court held that two states lacked standing to challenge DHSâs (the U.S. Department of Homeland Securityâs) immigration enforcement policies because they lacked âa legally and judicially cognizableâ injury where their alleged injury were costs associated with having more noncitizens in their states. Florida similarly fails to satisfy the âbedrock constitutional requirementâ of standing,â the Justice Department brief said.
Gov. Ron DeSantis and state Attorney General Ashley Moody have made a high-profile issue of challenging federal immigration policies as migrants have streamed across the countryâs southwest border.
The state filed a lawsuit in September 2021 alleging that the Biden administration violated laws through âcatch-and-releaseâ policies. The state has contended that undocumented immigrants move to Florida and create costs for such things as the education, health-care and prison systems.
The lawsuit resulted in Wetherellâs rulings against the federal government in March 2023 and May 2023, before the Supreme Court decided the Texas and Louisiana case.