Politics | Alabama illegal immigration Feds Sue Alabama Over Immigration Law Says law oversteps its bounds, interferes with federal policy By Kevin Spak Posted Aug 2, 2011 12:09 PM CDT Copied Participants in a protest against Alabama's new law against illegal immigration march through Linn Park, Saturday, June 25, 2011, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/ The Birmingham News, Mark Almond) In a move that will shock exactly no one, the Department of Justice is treating Alabama’s extraordinarily harsh illegal immigration law the same way it treated Arizona’s: It’s suing. The DOJ is asking for an injunction stopping the law from going into effect on Sept. 1, arguing that it unconstitutionally steps on the federal government’s immigration powers, the Birmingham News reports. “To put it in terms we relate to here in Alabama, you can only have one quarterback in a football game,” says the US Attorney for northern Alabama. “In immigration, the federal government is the quarterback.” Eric Holder and Janet Napolitano also released statements condemning the law, noting that even Birmingham’s chief of police opposes the law. It was one of two lawsuits filed against the law yesterday; the other was from the bishops in charge of Alabama’s Episcopal, Catholic, and United Methodist churches. Read These Next Mom allegedly passed 31 hospitals on road trip as daughter was dying. One of the Slender Man attackers escaped her group home, briefly. Man was planning cremation for his sister, who turned out to be alive. 'Putin wants legal recognition to what he has stolen.' Report an error