Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody files lawsuit over Bidenâs immigration moves
The federal lawsuit, filed in Tampa, contends that recent directives violate federal immigration laws.
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By News Service of Florida
Published Mar. 15
Updated Mar. 15
TALLAHASSEE â Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody has filed a federal lawsuit challenging immigration moves by President Joe Bidenâs administration, contending that the decisions threaten public safety.
âThe Biden administrationâs actions will allow criminal aliens to be released into and move freely in the state of Florida, and their resulting crime will cost the state millions of dollars on law enforcement, incarceration, and crime victimâs assistance,â said the 28-page lawsuit, filed March 8 in Tampa. âIt will also cause unquantifiable harm to Floridaâs citizenry and will force the state to expend its own law enforcement resources to pick up the slack.â
Fact-checking Ashley Moody on Biden s immigration detainer policy
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Father and son real-estate developers, 2 others, charged with racketeering, extortion, FDLE says
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FDLE Commissioner Rick Swearingen
A top Florida law enforcement official told Gov. Ron DeSantis and other state leaders Tuesday that extremely lax security at a municipal water plant northwest of Tampa allowed hackers to break into its computers to try to poison residents earlier this year.
The head of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Rick Swearingen, provided the unexpected update on the mysterious sabotage effort during a Cabinet meeting in Tallahassee. The criminal investigation continues in the case. No one was hurt.
Swearingen said his agency was promoting two-factor authentication – in which knowing a password alone is not enough to log into computers – to frustrate hackers. That appeared to confirm that the water plant in the town of Oldsmar wasn t using the security technology, which has been widely available for years.