Trump DOJ sues New Jersey over governor's order shielding illegal immigrants from ICE on state property
The Trump administration filed suit against New Jersey and Gov. Mikie Sherrill on Tuesday, challenging a freshly signed executive order that blocks federal immigration agents from arresting criminal illegal immigrants inside state facilities.
The Department of Justice argues that Sherrill's Executive Order No. 12, signed shortly after she took office earlier this month, prohibits Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and other federal immigration officials from conducting arrests of criminal illegal immigrants inside nonpublic areas of state property, including state correctional facilities, Newsmax reported. The order bars federal agents from accessing those areas without state authorization.
In other words, New Jersey's new governor looked at convicted criminals sitting in state prisons and decided the real threat was the federal agents trying to deport them.
The DOJ's Case
The complaint pulls no punches. According to the lawsuit:
"This law poses an intolerable obstacle to federal immigration enforcement and directly regulates and discriminates against the federal government, in contravention of the Supremacy Clause."
The Supremacy Clause argument is straightforward: states do not get to override federal law. They especially do not get to physically block federal officers from doing their jobs on government property where criminals are already in custody.
The complaint also noted that individuals released under these kinds of policies have included those convicted of aggravated assault, burglary, and drug and human trafficking. These are not people overstaying a visa and minding their own business. These are violent offenders and traffickers who, under Sherrill's order, would walk out of state facilities without ICE ever getting access to them.
Attorney General Pam Bondi framed the stakes bluntly:
"Federal agents are risking their lives to keep New Jersey citizens safe, and yet New Jersey's leaders are enacting policies designed to obstruct and endanger law enforcement."
"States may not deliberately interfere with our efforts to remove illegal aliens and arrest criminals. New Jersey's sanctuary policies will not stand."
A Pattern, Not an Anomaly
New Jersey is not alone in this fight, and the DOJ knows it. The Justice Department has filed similar lawsuits targeting policies in New York City, Minnesota, and Los Angeles. On Aug. 5, 2025, the DOJ published a formal list of what it called "sanctuary jurisdictions," identifying localities whose policies materially impede federal immigration operations.
This campaign traces back to Bondi's first day in office, when she directed the DOJ Civil Division to identify state and local laws that facilitate violations of federal immigration laws or impede lawful federal immigration operations. The message was clear from the start: the days of sanctuary cities and states operating as a parallel legal universe were numbered.
California blazed this trail in 2017 with its California Values Act, known as SB 54, which set the template for state-level obstruction of federal immigration enforcement. What Sherrill signed is a descendant of that same impulse: use state authority as a shield not for citizens, but for illegal immigrants who have already been convicted of crimes.
The Contradiction at the Heart of Sanctuary Policy
Consider what Sherrill's order actually requires in practice. A criminal illegal immigrant finishes a sentence in a New Jersey state correctional facility. ICE knows who he is, knows where he is, knows he's deportable. Under normal cooperation, agents could pick him up at the facility in a controlled, secure environment. Safe for the officers. Safe for the public.
Under Executive Order No. 12, that transfer cannot happen without state authorization. So the alternative becomes hunting that same individual on the streets after release, in an uncontrolled setting, with greater risk to agents and bystanders alike. The policy does not prevent deportation. It just makes it more dangerous for everyone involved.
This is the fundamental dishonesty of sanctuary policy. Its architects sell it as compassion. In practice, it forces federal agents into riskier operations while releasing convicted criminals into communities with no notice. The people most harmed are the residents of those communities, many of them immigrants themselves who came here legally and built lives they'd prefer not to share with convicted traffickers and violent offenders.
New Governor, Old Playbook
Sherrill took office and moved almost immediately to plant her flag on immigration obstruction. Executive Order No. 12 was not the product of months of deliberation or a response to some specific abuse. It was a political signal, signed shortly after she took office, aimed squarely at the progressive base that views any cooperation with federal immigration enforcement as collaboration.
No quote from Sherrill defending the order appeared in the source material. That silence is its own kind of statement. When your policy provokes a federal lawsuit alleging violations of the Supremacy Clause, and your response is silence, it suggests the policy was designed for applause lines, not courtroom scrutiny.
The DOJ, meanwhile, has made its posture unmistakable. This is the latest in a sustained legal campaign. Not rhetoric. Not press conferences. Lawsuits, filed in federal court, built on constitutional arguments that have prevailed before.
What Comes Next
The legal trajectory here favors the federal government. The Supremacy Clause is not ambiguous, and the principle that states cannot obstruct federal officers carrying out federal law is well established. Sherrill's order does not just decline to help ICE. It actively bars agents from accessing state facilities where known criminal illegal immigrants are held. That is a different animal entirely, and it is the kind of direct interference that courts have repeatedly struck down.
The broader question is political. Every blue-state governor watching this case has to decide whether sanctuary posturing is worth the legal exposure. New York City, Minnesota, and Los Angeles are already finding out. New Jersey just joined the list.
Somewhere in a New Jersey state prison right now, a convicted human trafficker is counting down the days to release. Under Sherrill's order, ICE cannot be there to meet him. The governor calls that policy. The Justice Department calls it obstruction.
Federal courts will decide which label sticks.





