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Class A misdemeanors include theft, negligent homicide and criminal mischief, while felonies range from aggravated burglary to rape and murder. In a statement after the ruling, Herbert said he has told law enforcement officials the law is on hold but was confident the state would prevail. "Utah's attorney general and state Legislature worked hard to craft a bill that would withstand constitutional scrutiny," Herbert said in a statement after the ruling. "Utah will have ample opportunity in court to demonstrate this bill is on solid footing." ACLU managing attorney Cecillia Wang said the law is potentially worse than the Arizona law because anyone stopped by police could be required to prove their citizenship status. Making it optional for lesser offenses makes racial profiling even more likely, she said. "This violates the Constitutional right of every American," Wang said. "The times where officers have discretion are the vast number of times that people encounter police." Police chiefs and county sheriffs have said very little will change in their handling of immigration laws. That was true Tuesday
-- for 14 hours, at least -- when no arrests were made based on the new law. There has also been very little public outcry about the law, and no protests or rallies were reported Tuesday. That is due in large part to the generally positive response from the public to the bipartisan immigration overhaul passed by the Legislature in March, said National Immigration Law Center managing attorney Karen Tumlin. The package of reforms is based on compassion in immigration laws, and includes a guest worker program starting in 2013 to allow illegal immigrants to remain, live and work in the state, winning support from some liberal immigration advocates but has been criticized by opponents as an amnesty program.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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