
Trump Justice Department sues Illinois and city of Chicago over immigration laws
CBSN
The Justice Department sued the state of Illinois, the city of Chicago and other local jurisdictions alleging their laws are standing in the way of the Trump administration's increased immigration enforcement in the area, according to a federal lawsuit filed Thursday.
In the Trump administration's first legal bid to stave off local efforts to impede immigration operations, federal officials are asking a judge to bar the Illinois, Chicago, Cook County and the Cook County Sheriff from using local laws that protect migrants to hamper law enforcement.
The Justice Department said certain state and local provisions are "designed to and in fact interfere with and discriminate against the Federal Government's enforcement of federal immigration law" and accused local officials of working to obstruct federal efforts to curb illegal migration, allegations state officials dispute.

The FBI arrested a Texas man for allegedly beating one passenger, attempting to strike another, injuring a second passenger and vulgarly berating a flight attendant aboard an American Airlines flight from Wichita to Washington Reagan National Airport earlier this month, CBS News has learned. It occurred five weeks to the day after the crash of an American Airlines flight on the same route.