AG Mark Brnovich sues over Joe Biden’s border policies

0
701
FILE - In this Thursday, Aug. 9, 2012, file photo, suspected undocumented immigrants are moved out of the holding area after being processed at the Border Patrol's Tucson Sector. The federal government is appealing an order by a U.S. District Court judge requiring the Border Patrol to provide beds, blankets, showers and medical evaluations to migrants held in its Tucson Sector facilities for over 48 hours. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

Arizona’s top state prosecutor sued the Biden administration Monday over what he calls “environmentally disruptive” decisions to halt border wall construction and change immigration policies.

The lawsuit filed by Republican Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich in federal court in Arizona against officials in Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration says the reversals of previous policies violate the National Environmental Protection Act.

“Defendants have embarked on multiple environmentally disruptive policies without performing even cursory environmental analysis,” the lawsuit says.

The filing asks the U.S. District Court for now to void decisions to halt border wall construction and the “Remain in Mexico” policy requiring asylum seekers to wait south of the border for while their claims are processed.

Customs and Border Protection and the other U.S. agencies named in the suit do not comment on pending litigation.

It’s the latest example of how Brnovich and other conservative state officials are pushing back against Biden’s changes in the previous administration’s hardline policies.

Brian Segee, senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, called the lawsuit “political grandstanding and an insult to border communities, wildlife and wild lands.”

The center is among environmental groups that opposed the wall.

“If Arizona’s attorney general truly cared about the environment he would’ve sued the Donald Trump administration for ignoring environmental laws and tried to stop these destructive walls from being built,” Segee said.

Republished with the permission of the Associated Press.