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NY accused of ‘political theatre’ by bus companies who ferried migrants from Texas

The Big Apple filed a lawsuit this week over a “political theatre” that it failed to go through a $700 million lawsuit against a bus company to transport immigrants from Texas to New York City.

Roadrunner Charters Inc. – one of 17 bus businesses Adams sued for transporting 33,000 immigrants to the Big Apple last year – claims the mayor's case was “frivolous” and that he intervened in the business because he was unconstitutional. did.

The central Texas-based Roadrunner seeks unspecified damages from the city for a lawsuit that it is “just a political theatre” and diverts the public from the “inadequate” of federal immigration policy. Court documents allege that this means.

The legal story between Mayor Adams and the bus ferrying 33,000 immigrants from Texas to New York returned to court this week in a new lawsuit by one bus company. Reuters

From January 2024, the mayor's lawsuit has costly to place bus companies on hooks for hundreds of millions of dollars and care for the immigrants the company transported.

However, in July, a Manhattan judge found it unconstitutional because it was based on the 19th century “laws for the poor,” which was already found to be unconstitutional by the US Supreme Court decades ago. And he abandoned the city's lawsuit.

Roadrunner Charters Inc. sued the city, claiming it had failed a $700 million lawsuit since last year, and was “frivolous” and illegally obstructed its business. Robert Miller

The city's incident threatened Roadrunner in March to stop immigrants halfway through the county, as he had been doing since spring 2022, and to run the company in search of massive damages, according to Roadrunner's Manhattan Federal Court. The lawsuit was filed.

The city violated Roadrunner's constitutional rights to carry out interstate commerce and transport, the complaint alleges.

The new case is an effort to discourage the city from filing frivolous lawsuits that affect private companies that have nothing to do with immigration policies,” plaintiffs' lawyer Robert Huntman told the Post.

Adams' lawsuit was dismissed in July as “unconstitutional.” Christopher Sadowski

“The judge should be praised for her well-written opinion,” Huntman said of Rosad's firing in the July Adams case.

Adams is said to have sent a bloated profit of about $1,650 per person in the lawsuit at the time.

A city hall spokesman said: “In the height of an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, Texas and several bus companies were trying to eliminate the social services system by notifying New York City of thousands of immigrants.

“The city will file lawsuits to combat these efforts, stop blatant disregard for the well-being of immigrants and maintain the city's ability to serve all those who care for us. Check the filings and Masu.”

The immigration crisis has been constantly present in headlines since President Trump took office, signing executive orders that include those seeking to abolish birthrights as part of his agenda to crack down on illegal immigration.

Trump's Justice Department on Friday threw a criminal corruption case against Adams in hopes that the mayor will focus on controlling the immigration crisis in New York City.

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