Yeah, About That ICE Arrest at San Francisco Airport...Here's Who Tipped Them Off
We All Knew This GOP Senator Was a Squish...and He Proved It Again...
Jury Slaps Meta With $375 Million Fine for Failing to Stop Child Predators
Local Democrat Officials Busted for Stealing Homes From Struggling Homeowners
Democrats Just Can't Let This Go
Check Out Why This Guy Says He'd Vote for Gavin Newsom in 2028
Jury Finds Meta, Google Liable for Negligence in Landmark Social Media Lawsuit
Canadian Gun Confiscation Program Not Shaping Up Well
If We're Losing in Iran, I'd Love to See Winning
Judge Smacks Down DC's Plea for Fast-Track Appeal of Gun Magazine Decision
Dan Bongino: Beware of Those With 'Secret Knowledge'
This Democrat Said ICE Isn't Qualified to Serve in Airports. The TSA Administrator...
Steve Scalise Blasts Hakeem Jeffries for His Response to the Murder of Sheridan...
Are We Safe Anymore?
Feds: Detroit Woman Stole Millions Through 80 Fake College Enrollments
Tipsheet

He's Back

He's Back
Justice Department attorney Tony West is diving back into the controversy as he gears up to represent the Obama Administration in its suit against Arizona. West was previously part of a group of lawyers who defended Gitmo detanees. 
Advertisement


West, the assistant attorney general for the department's Civil Division, once represented "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh, a controversial move that West feared would derail his political ambitions and helped delay his nomination to the department for three months in 2009. 

He helped negotiate a 20-year sentence for Lindh, an American citizen who was 21 years old when he was captured in Afghanistan in 2001. Under the deal, Lindh avoided a life sentence by pleading guilty to serving in the Taliban army and carrying weapons, and the government dropped its most serious charges, including conspiracy to kill Americans and engaging in terrorism. 

Now West will lead the U.S. effort to block Arizona's immigration law from its July 29 implementation. The law makes it a crime to be in the state without immigration papers and requires police to determine whether suspects are in the country legally -- a provision that critics say will promote racial profiling and is unconstitutional.

In the lawsuit, the Justice Department claims the federal government has "preeminent authority" on immigration enforcement and that the Arizona law "disrupts" that balance.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement