(CAMARILLO, CA) Federal lawyers for President Trump are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to restore wider “roving” immigration stops across Los Angeles County, after a district judge temporarily curbed those operations amid reports that agents cited people speaking Spanish near Camarillo as part of the reason to question them.
California officials, civil rights groups, and community advocates say using language in this way is discriminatory and chills families from seeking help, while the administration argues Border Patrol and ICE may rely on the “totality of the circumstances” to form reasonable suspicion during brief roadside encounters.

Recent filings and local reporting
On August 12, 2025, local press accounts detailed federal efforts to justify stops near Camarillo, noting that agents listed Spanish-language use among several observed factors that led to questioning. Civil rights organizations and California lawmakers condemned treating language as a stand-in for immigration status.
Three days earlier, on August 9, CalMatters reported that the administration asked the Supreme Court for emergency relief to lift a district court order limiting roving stops in Los Angeles County. The district judge found the plaintiffs likely to prevail on claims that certain practices violated constitutional and statutory limits.
SCOTUSblog confirmed the emergency application seeks to block the order and restore broader stop authority while appeals proceed.
As of August 12, the district court’s temporary restriction remains in effect unless the Ninth Circuit or the Supreme Court stays it. The administration’s filing argues the lower court misapplied precedent governing brief investigatory stops in the immigration context.
California lawmakers are advancing bills to limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement in sensitive spaces such as schools, medical offices, day-care centers, and houses of worship. State Senator Sasha Renée Pérez publicly opposed any return to roving immigration raids in Los Angeles County, aligning with county officials and advocates who warn of unlawful profiling and community fear.
Court fight over roving stops
What are “roving” stops?
- Brief, warrantless encounters by federal agents away from the physical border.
- Purportedly based on reasonable suspicion that a person is unlawfully present.
Courts require reasonable suspicion to rest on specific, articulable facts, and they scrutinize factors closely tied to ethnicity or national origin.
Recent reporting indicates agents sometimes pointed to Spanish being spoken as one of several observations leading to roadside questioning. Critics say this treats language as a proxy for ethnicity or national origin, raising Equal Protection and Fourth Amendment concerns, and also implicating state civil rights rules.
The administration, in its Supreme Court filing, does not claim language alone is enough; it frames language as only one piece of a larger picture agents may consider.
Possible outcomes and timing
- The district court’s order suggests a likelihood that some challenged practices violated legal standards.
- A Supreme Court ruling on the emergency stay request could arrive within days or weeks and will determine whether current limits stay in place during the appeal.
- VisaVerge.com reports that emergency orders in similar cases often arrive quickly and can set the tone for interim federal agency conduct.
Potential effects:
- If the Court grants a stay:
- Agents could resume broader roving stops under the administration’s interpretation of reasonable suspicion.
- Roadside questioning and document checks would likely increase.
- If the Court denies the stay:
- The district court’s limits remain while the case proceeds on appeal.
- Los Angeles County would see a period of reduced roving-stop activity.
For readers seeking official context on agency roles, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection site explains the mission and duties of the U.S. Border Patrol: https://www.cbp.gov/border-security/along-us-borders/border-patrol. While that resource does not address this specific lawsuit, it outlines the federal mandate at issue, which the administration says requires flexibility to conduct brief, targeted stops away from the border inside the United States 🇺🇸.
Key takeaway: The district court’s temporary restrictions are currently in effect unless the Ninth Circuit or the Supreme Court issues a stay.
Community impact
Families in Southern California often live with mixed-status realities. Increased roadside stops can cause people to:
- Skip medical appointments
- Avoid school meetings
- Fear calling police after a crash
Even U.S. citizens who speak Spanish can feel singled out. Advocates say this chill harms public safety and public health.
One common scenario: a parent speaking Spanish with a child in a car near Camarillo is pulled aside for questions. Although the government says language is only one factor among many, the lived experience can feel like profiling—especially for people who have done nothing wrong and lack legal training to challenge an encounter.
California’s legislative response
California’s 2025 proposals aim to put firmer guardrails around everyday places where families seek care, worship, and work. The California Latino Legislative Caucus announced measures on April 8, 2025, including:
- SB 81 (Sen. Jesse Arreguín): Requires healthcare providers to deny ICE access to nonpublic areas and bars disclosure of a patient’s immigration status without a warrant.
- AB 421 (Asm. José Luis Solache Jr.): Bans state law enforcement from assisting or providing information to immigration enforcement within one mile of day-care facilities, places of worship, and medical offices.
- SB 635 (Sen. María Elena Durazo): Prohibits street-vendor permitting authorities from requiring fingerprinting or asking about immigration status or criminal history.
- SB 294 (Sen. Eloise Gómez Reyes): Requires employers to post notice of workers’ labor and civil rights when interacting with law enforcement and to notify the employee’s emergency contact if the worker is detained or arrested.
- AB 1261 (Asm. Mia Bonta): Establishes state-funded legal representation for unaccompanied children in federal immigration proceedings.
These measures reflect state-level resistance to expansion of interior enforcement that lawmakers say risks profiling or chilling access to services. Their final fate will depend on committee votes and the governor’s decisions later in the session.
Broader context and implications
- The broader 2025 policy climate includes renewed national efforts by some conservative groups to challenge Plyler v. Doe (1982), the Supreme Court decision guaranteeing K–12 education regardless of immigration status.
- While distinct from roadside stops, such challenges illustrate how immigrant rights in schools and public services are being contested this year.
- California officials argue that aggressive federal enforcement in or near sensitive spaces undermines community trust and the state’s public policy goals.
Practical outlook for residents
- Current status: The district court’s limits on certain roving stops are in effect, reducing the number of warrantless roadside interrogations while litigation continues.
- If the Supreme Court grants the administration’s emergency stay: Roving stops may expand again; officers could rely on a broader mix of observations—potentially including Spanish-language use as one factor—to justify brief questioning.
- Legal scrutiny: Courts will continue to closely examine any factor that correlates with ethnicity or national origin, especially when it appears to drive who gets stopped.
SCOTUSblog has reported that the justices are considering the administration’s request to suspend the district court’s order pending appeal. CalMatters has documented earlier steps in the case and the local stakes. The upcoming ruling will shape the ground rules for roving stops in Los Angeles County and signal how sharply courts will police the line between federal discretion and anti-profiling limits as appeals move ahead.
This Article in a Nutshell
Federal lawyers seek Supreme Court relief to restore roving immigration stops after a district judge limited roadside encounters following reports agents noted Spanish usage among observed factors near Camarillo.