Attorney General James Uthmeierโs office Wednesday filed a motion seeking a stay of the preliminary injunction issued by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams. The law, passed during a February special legislative session, created state crimes for undocumented immigrants who enter or re-enter Florida. In issuing the preliminary injunction, Williams said it likely is preempted by federal immigration laws.
Uthmeierโs office late Tuesday filed a notice of appealing the injunction to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. It followed Wednesday with the motion asking Williams to issue a stay.
The plaintiffs in the case โ the Florida Immigrant Coalition, the Farmworker Association of Florida and two individual plaintiffs โ will have until May 14 to respond to the motion, according to a court docket.
In issuing the preliminary injunction, Williams pointed to issues such as the law (SB 4-C) requiring that violators go to jail.
โFirst, it gives state officials authority to prosecute illegal entry or reentry in cases where federal actors may choose not to,โ the judge wrote. โEven if federal and state officials choose to commence parallel dual prosecutions under both laws, SB 4-Cโs mandatory detention provision limits federal law enforcement discretion to recommend pre-trial release and obstructs federal courtsโ ability to conduct proceedings requiring defendantsโ presence. Relatedly, state officials are free to prosecute a charge under SB 4-C even while a federal immigration proceeding is underway, which may determine that the defendant may remain lawfully present under federal law.โ
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This article appears in May 1-7, 2025.

