Spokesperson

Annette

Annette Martínez Orabona

Directora Ejecutiva

Ella

Fermin Arraiza

Fermín L. Arraiza Navas

Director Legal

Él

David

David Cordero Mercado

Director de Comunicaciones

Él

Media Contact

David Cordero Mercado, Communications Director – ACLU of Puerto Rico , (787) 247-9057

San Juan, P.R. – The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico dismissed with a “no cause” the petition from the Department of Transportation and Public Works (DTOP) to review the determinations of the lower courts which concluded that the subpoena that led to the voluntary delivery of data from thousands of immigrant persons to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is a public document. The determination keeps in effect the order to deliver said document to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Puerto Rico.

"This resolution from the Supreme Court confirms, once again, that the secretary of the DTOP has the obligation to make public the alleged subpoena and any document attached to the voluntary delivery of the personal data of thousands of immigrant persons in Puerto Rico, to whom the government itself had promised confidentiality by virtue of Law 97 of 2013," said attorney Annette Martínez Orabona, executive director of the ACLU of Puerto Rico.

The ACLU of Puerto Rico filed a lawsuit on October 1, 2025, after the secretary of the DTOP, Edwin González Montalvo, refused to comply with a request for access to public information submitted by the organization to learn how the agency handled and responded to the requirement made by ICE to the state agency. After an argumentative hearing, the TPI ordered the DTOP to deliver the subpoena—a requirement issued by an agency or administrative authority—maintaining that the document was not confidential, as the DTOP alleged. The agency failed to comply with the order and instead turned to the Court of Appeals, which confirmed the TPI's determination in January. The DTOP then turned to the highest judicial forum.

In the Supreme Court, the petition for certiorari presented by the secretary of the DTOP—who is represented by Justice—was attended by a three-judge panel composed of Associate Judge Pabón Charneco and Associate Judges Estrella Martínez and Candelario López. The resolution was issued on April 17 but reported last Friday. A ten-day period is now underway, within which the DTOP can request a reconsideration from the Supreme Court.

"Our call to the secretary of the DTOP is to comply with the delivery order, in recognition of the unequivocal conclusion that the information it attempts to keep hidden is public, and that the country has the right to know how and why decisions are made, in this case related to immigrant communities in Puerto Rico," said attorney Fermín Arraiza Navas, legal director of the ACLU of Puerto Rico.

By delivering the information to ICE, the secretary of the DTOP endangered the safety of thousands of immigrants who trusted the government of Puerto Rico when, in 2013, a process was enabled by law for them to have access to a driver's license and were promised that their information regarding immigration status would not be used for immigration purposes. Twelve years later, the administration of Governor Jenniffer González Colón failed to comply with what the state law itself established by delivering the information to ICE, the ACLU of Puerto Rico pointed out.

"In Puerto Rico, the right of access to information is recognized as a human and constitutional right of fundamental rank," the Appeals Court emphasized in its decision issued in January. "We determine that the subpoena subject to the information request presented to the DTOP by the ACLU is a public document subject to disclosure," the Appeals Court held.

The conclusion, then, also confirmed that the DTOP and the Department of Justice tried to shield themselves behind generalities about “ongoing investigations” and “public safety” to hide a document that should never have been secret. In that sense, the ACLU of Puerto Rico reiterated that both the request for information from ICE and the voluntary delivery by the DTOP respond to a persecution operation against immigrant persons who trusted the State when applying for a driver's license.

"We reiterate that the courts are called to be cautious when granting any request for confidentiality from the State, and that it is the government itself that must unequivocally prove the applicability of any of the exceptions, rather than resting on mere generalizations. In that sense, we maintain that opacity in public affairs must be treated with suspicion and limited, as an exception, to matters of great importance," the Appeals Court stated.

The Court was explicit in rejecting the idea that the local government was prevented from disclosing the subpoena and highlighted that the government could not name "the existence of any statute or regulation, federal or local, that prohibits whoever receives a federal subpoena from disclosing the same."

Similarly, the Appeals Court discarded the government's narrative that the disclosure of the document would affect an alleged ongoing investigation. "We are not dealing with a document whose disclosure could in any way affect the course of an investigation," it noted.

You can see more details about this case and find documents at this link.

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Mar 17, 2026
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  • Derechos de Inmigrantes

ACLU de PR v. DTOP

La Unión Americana de Libertades Civiles (ACLU, en inglés) de Puerto Rico presentó una petición de Mandamus ante el Tribunal de Primera Instancia en San Juan, contra el secretario del Departamento de Transportación y Obras Públicas (DTOP), Edwin González Montalvo, y el Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico (ELA), para que el gobierno entregue de manera inmediata todos los documentos relacionados con el traspaso de información confidencial de cerca de 6,000 personas migrantes que obtuvieron licencias de conducir bajo la Ley Núm. 97 de 2013, incluyendo un subpoena alegadamente emitido por una agencia federal. La acción de la ACLU-PR surge luego de que el DTOP se negara a proveer copias de los requerimientos de información emitidos por el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS, en inglés) y agencias como el Servicio de Control de Inmigración y Aduanas (ICE, en inglés), así como las evaluaciones legales y la información que fue entregada para cumplir con dichos requerimientos. La respuesta de la agencia se basó en generalidades, sin sustentar legalmente el reclamo de confidencialidad, lo que constituye un incumplimiento de un deber ministerial y una flagrante violación al derecho de acceso a la información pública, un derecho de rango constitucional en Puerto Rico. El pleito se fundamenta en la revelación pública de que el DTOP, entre febrero y marzo de 2025, entregó a agencias federales de inmigración datos personales de sobre cerca de 6,000 conductores con estatus migratorio no regularizado. Posteriormente, el propio gobierno federal confirmó que estos datos están siendo utilizados activamente para identificar inmigrantes, localizarlos, arrestarlos sin orden judicial y deportarlos. La ACLU-PR subrayó que esta acción del gobierno de Puerto Rico se realizó en contravención directa de la propia Ley 97-2013, que ordena al Secretario del DTOP establecer los mecanismos necesarios para que este registro no pueda ser usado para discriminar ni se divulgue la información.