http://content.usatoday.com/communit...1#.T-h1qvVdAx0
The Supreme Court today struck down most of Arizona's controversial law aimed at cracking down on illegal immigrants.
The  court left standing only the "check your papers" partsof the law that  requires state and local police to perform roadside immigration checks  of people they've stopped or detained if a "reasonable suspicion" exists  they are in the country illegally.
The court indicated that that would face further scrutiny.
The  court rejected the parts of the law that making it a state crime for  illegal immigrants not to possess their federal registration cards; for  illegal imigrants to work, apply for work or solicit work; and a section  that allowed state and local police to arrest illegal immigrants  without a warrant when probable cause exists that they committed "any  public offense that makes the person removable from the United States."
The  law, known as SB1010, has become a flashpoint for the debate over how  to enforce immigration in the U.S. and served as a blueprint for similar  laws in five other states - Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina  and Utah.
President Obama called the Arizona law "misguided" and  his Department of Justice sued the state. Former Massachusetts governor  and GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney said he would drop the federal  lawsuit against Arizona and adopted the Arizona-inspired idea of making  life so difficult for illegal immigrants that they choose to  "self-deport."
Four key provisions of the law were blocked by U.S.  District Judge Susan Bolton in Phoenix, a ruling that was upheld by the  9th U.S. Circuit Court in San Francisco. The Supreme Court agreed to  hear the case, and both sides held oral arguments on April 25.
Sponsors  said the law was necessary because the federal government has failed to  control the influx of illegal immigrants into the country, forcing  states like Arizona to grapple with the security concerns and high costs  of educating and caring for illegal immigrants. They said the law  simply empowers police and state officials to help enforce federal  immigration laws.
Opponents said it unfairly criminalizes  otherwise law-abiding people, opens the door for racial profiling of  Hispanics legally in the country and forces state law enforcement to  interfere with the intricacies of federal immigration policy.
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