Politics | illegal immigration Judge's Ruling Killed State Immigration Reform Signals efforts will have to come at federal level By Kevin Spak Posted Jul 29, 2010 12:07 PM CDT Copied A protester sitting on Seventh Street is led away by police during an immigration reform protest outside a federal building in San Francisco, Wednesday, July 28, 2010. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg) Judge Susan Bolton’s decision to fence off much of Arizona’s immigration law could also put a stop to hundreds of similar attempts to combat illegal immigration in other states. Though Bolton hasn’t finished hearing the case yet, stopping the law sent a pretty clear message that she agreed with the Justice Department’s argument that the Arizona law intruded on federal turf. “This is a warning to any other jurisdiction,” the head of one Mexican-American group tells the New York Times. Bolton’s ruling went even farther than the Obama administration anticipated, according to the Wall Street Journal. While the Justice Department case hadn’t focused on racial profiling, for example, Bolton brought it up, citing a Supreme Court precedent protecting aliens from “the possibility of inquisitorial practices and police surveillance.” Read These Next Christina Applegate pulls back the curtain on her real life. Driver who killed Dixie Chicks founder hears his fate. SCOTUS hands significant loss to private prison company. Cops say assisted living worker fatally shot a resident in the head. Report an error