Supreme Court lifted temporary restrictions on immigration raids, allowing agents to resume stops based on appearance, language and location.

The federal government vows to “flood the zone” with enforcement after 6-3 ruling, despite widespread protests and community fears.

One in three county residents are immigrants, with raids already leading to thousands of arrests and business disruptions.

In a county where one in three residents are immigrants, a sense of anger and dread erupted Monday as non-citizens and their families realized the immigration raids that rocked their lives this summer could become a never-ending nightmare.

Monday’s Supreme Court order gave the green-light to what critics called “indiscriminate” immigration stops that led to thousands of arrests and set off da

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