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 Puerto Rico Supreme Court again denied the petition filed by the Department of Transportation and Public Works (DTOP, in Spanish) seeking review of lower court determinations that concluded that the subpoena that led to the voluntary disclosure of data belonging to thousands of immigrants to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is a public document. The determination keeps in effect the order requiring the document to be turned over to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Puerto Rico.

“This resolution from the Supreme Court confirms, once again, that the Secretary of DTOP has an obligation to make public the alleged subpoena and any document tied to the voluntary disclosure of the personal data of thousands of immigrants in Puerto Rico, to whom the government itself had promised confidentiality under Act 97 of 2013,” said Annette Martínez Orabona, Executive Director of the ACLU of Puerto Rico.

The ACLU of Puerto Rico filed a lawsuit on October 1, 2025, after DTOP Secretary Edwin González Montalvo refused to comply with a public information request submitted by the organization to learn how the agency handled and responded to the request made by ICE to the state agency. After an argumentative hearing, the Court of First Instance ordered DTOP to turn over the subpoena — a request issued by an agency or administrative authority — holding that the document was not confidential, as DTOP had claimed. The agency failed to comply with the order and, instead, went to the Court of Appeals, which in January affirmed the determination of the Court of First Instance. DTOP then turned to the highest judicial forum.

The Supreme Court had already issued a denial on April 27 in response to the petition for certiorari filed by DTOP. The DTOP Secretary, who is represented by the Department of Justice, then filed a motion for reconsideration, which was addressed by a three-justice panel composed of Chief Justice Maite Oronoz Rodríguez and Associate Justices Erick Kolthoff Caraballo and Ángel Colón Pérez. The resolution with the new denial was issued on June 5 but was notified last Friday, June 12. The agency may still file a second motion for reconsideration.

“Our call to the DTOP Secretary remains the same: comply with the order to turn over the document, in recognition of the unequivocal conclusion that the information he is trying 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 Fermín Arraiza Navas, Legal Director of the ACLU of Puerto Rico.

By turning over the information to ICE, the DTOP Secretary endangered the safety of the thousands of immigrants who trusted the Government of Puerto Rico when, in 2013, a legal process was created so they could obtain 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 turning the information over to ICE, the ACLU of Puerto Rico stated.

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

That conclusion also confirmed that DTOP and the Department of Justice attempted to hide behind generalities about “ongoing investigations” and “public safety” to conceal a document that should never have been secret. In that sense, the ACLU of Puerto Rico reiterated that both ICE’s request for information and DTOP’s voluntary disclosure respond to an operation of persecution against immigrants who trusted the State when applying for a driver’s license.

The Court was explicit in rejecting the idea that the local government was barred from disclosing the subpoena and stressed that the government could not identify “the existence of any statute or regulation, federal or local, that prohibits a person who receives a federal subpoena from disclosing it.”

Similarly, the Court of Appeals rejected the government’s narrative that 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.

Related Content

Court Case
March 17, 2026
Placeholder image
  • Derechos de Inmigrantes|
  • +2 Issues

ACLU of PR v. DTOP

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Puerto Rico filed a petition for mandamus in the Court of First Instance in San Juan against the Secretary of the Department of Transportation and Public Works (DTOP), Edwin González Montalvo, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, seeking the immediate release of all documents related to the transfer of confidential information concerning nearly 6,000 migrants who obtained driver’s licenses under Act No. 97 of 2013, including a subpoena allegedly issued by a federal agency. The ACLU-PR’s action comes after DTOP refused to provide copies of information requests issued by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and agencies such as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), as well as the legal assessments and the information that was turned over in response to those requests. The agency’s response relied on generalities, without legally substantiating its claim of confidentiality, which constitutes a failure to perform a ministerial duty and a flagrant violation of the right of access to public information, a constitutional right in Puerto Rico. The lawsuit is based on the public disclosure that, between February and March 2025, DTOP turned over personal data on nearly 6,000 drivers with unregularized immigration status to federal immigration agencies. The federal government later confirmed that these data are being actively used to identify immigrants, locate them, arrest them without a warrant, and deport them. The ACLU-PR underscored that this action by the government of Puerto Rico was carried out in direct contravention of Act 97-2013 itself, which requires the Secretary of DTOP to establish the necessary mechanisms to ensure that this registry cannot be used to discriminate and that the information is not disclosed.
Press Release
October 1, 2025
Placeholder image
  • Free Speech|
  • +1 Issue

ACLU of Puerto Rico Sues DTOP for Concealing Information Regarding Mass Transfer of Data on Approximately 6,000 Migrants to ICE

Demands immediate delivery of all documents related to the data handover, an action that has facilitated rights violations against immigrants in the archipelago.
Press Release
November 7, 2025
Placeholder image
  • Free Speech|
  • +1 Issue

Court Orders DTOP to Hand Over to ACLU of Puerto Rico the Subpoena Related to the Transfer of Immigrant Data to ICE

The organization argued that the alleged subpoena received by the agency is not protected by confidentiality and that there is a public interest in knowing precisely what information was requested and shared, as well as the process that led to the transfer.
Press Release
January 9, 2026
Placeholder image
  • Immigrant Rights

Court of Appeals orders DTOP to disclose subpoena regarding the handover of information on thousands of immigrants

The appellate ruling in the ACLU of Puerto Rico’s case reaffirms the fundamental right of access to information and the public’s right to know how the transaction between the state agency and ICE occurred
Issue Areas: Immigrant Rights