Protestors in Wimauma, Florida on Feb. 16, 2025. Credit: Photo by Dave Decker
After a federal judge Tuesday issued a preliminary injunction to block a new Florida immigration law, the state wants the ruling put on hold while it pursues an appeal.

Attorney General James Uthmeierโ€™s 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.

Uthmeierโ€™s 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.

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โ€œThat law does nothing more than exercise Floridaโ€™s inherent sovereign authority to protect its citizens by aiding the enforcement of federal immigration law,โ€ the motion said.

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.

โ€œFirst, it gives state officials authority to prosecute illegal entry or reentry in cases where federal actors may choose not to,โ€ the judge wrote. โ€œEven if federal and state officials choose to commence parallel dual prosecutions under both laws, SB 4-Cโ€™s 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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