A California court has dismissed a lawsuit filed by President Donald Trump’s administration against ​Los Angeles over a city ordinance limiting its ‌cooperation with federal immigration authorities.
U.S. District Judge Fernando Olguin rejected the administration’s argument that the city’s policy was unconstitutional. He ​gave the administration permission to file an amended ​complaint.

Los Angeles city attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto said in ​a statement on Monday that the ruling “reinforces the well-established principle that local governments have the authority to decide how to use ​their personnel and resources.”
The administration’s lawsuit, filed last June, ​alleged that Los Angeles violated federal law by enacting policies barring ‌city ⁠resources from being used to aid immigration enforcement operations or collect information about individuals’ citizenship status. The lawsuit came weeks after Trump deployed troops to quell protests ​in Los ​Angeles against ⁠deportation operations.
Olguin on Saturday rejected the administration’s argument that the city unconstitutionally tried to ​regulate the federal government, finding instead that ​the ⁠ordinance “controls the actions of the City’s own agents and agencies.”
The Trump administration has filed several lawsuits challenging similar ⁠policies adopted ​in jurisdictions run by Democrats. ​Federal judges have dismissed administration lawsuits brought against the cities of Boston and Chicago.