Attorney General Directive 2018-6, the Immigrant Trust Directive, limits state, county, and municipal law enforcement cooperation with federal civil immigration enforcement across all New Jersey jurisdictions.
Issued by the Attorney General in 2018 and refined in subsequent guidance, the Immigrant Trust Directive binds every state, county, and municipal law enforcement agency in New Jersey. It restricts officers from stopping, questioning, arresting, searching, or detaining individuals based solely on suspected civil immigration status. Agencies cannot provide ICE with non-public personal information, allow ICE to interview detainees without consent and counsel, or honor civil immigration detainers absent a judicial warrant or specific qualifying conviction. The directive is enforceable through Attorney General oversight and applies uniformly statewide regardless of any contrary local resolution. Federal criminal immigration matters and judicial warrants remain outside the directive's restrictions.
Officers and agencies that violate the directive face administrative discipline, potential decertification, and Attorney General enforcement action; civil rights violations may also expose municipalities to liability.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Parsippany, NJ
Parsippany-Troy Hills regulates retaining walls under Chapter 430 (Zoning) and Chapter 159 (Fences, Walls and Other Safeguards). Retaining walls over 6 feet ...
Morris County, NJ
Backyard composting is allowed and encouraged. The Morris County Municipal Utilities Authority (MCMUA) runs two vegetative-waste compost facilities and gives...
Morris County, NJ
Morris County sets no artificial-turf ordinance. Whether synthetic turf is allowed, and any lot-coverage or drainage limits, is decided by your municipality....
Morris County, NJ
Morris County does not require native plants, but New Jersey encourages them. NJDEP model tree and stormwater ordinances favor native, non-invasive species f...
Morris County, NJ
New Jersey has no state or Morris County law restricting residential rainwater harvesting. Rain barrels and cisterns for non-potable outdoor use are legal, a...
Morris County, NJ
Morris County sets no watering ordinance. Lawn-watering limits in New Jersey are declared statewide by the NJDEP under its drought tiers (Watch, Warning, Eme...
See how Parsippany's sanctuary policy preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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