Alabama’s absurd new immigration law lands Mercedes exec in jail

Police in Alabama arrested and briefly held a visiting Mercedes-Benz executive from Germany for not having a drivers license, drawing attention to the US state’s controversial new immigration law.

Police in Alabama arrested and briefly held a visiting Mercedes-Benz executive from Germany for not having a drivers license, drawing attention to the US state’s controversial new immigration law.

According to the Associated Press, the unnamed 46-year-old manager was only able to present a German identity card when pulled over by Tuscaloosa police last Wednesday. He was subsequently arrested and charged with not having proper identification as required by Alabamaโ€™s new immigration law, which has been criticised as being excessively draconian.

Eventually, a colleague was able to find the manโ€™s passport, visa and drivers licence at his hotel and took it to police, who subsequently released the Daimler executive, the Associated Press reported.

Mercedes-Benzโ€™s headquarters in Germany confirmed the arrest, but declined to comment further, directing all questions to its US subsidiary, which was not available on Monday morning.

“We heard that he didnโ€™t have a drivers licence but we donโ€™t have any more information right now,” a spokeswoman told The Local.

The incident even apparently drew in Alabamaโ€™s governor, who called the authorities to determine what had happened, although his office denied he had exerted any pressure on police.

The executive was caught up in the controversy surrounding an Alabama law passed in June, which is widely considered to be the strictest in America. Most of the law, which requires police to verify someoneโ€™s immigration status if officers have a โ€œreasonable suspicionโ€ he or she could be in the United States illegally, has been upheld by courts so far, despite challenges by civil liberties advocates.

Mercedes-Benz has built cars at a plant near Tuscaloosa since 1993 and in 2000 invested $600 million (โ‚ฌ445 million) in an expansion of the facility. According to the company, the plant provides more than 22,000 jobs and is Alabamaโ€™s largest exporter, sending $1 billion (โ‚ฌ743 million) in exports throughout the world.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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