The Justice Department told Texas Thursday that it intends to file legal action against the placement of floating barriers in the Rio Grande River. The Justice Department has sued on borderrelated matters before. Last year the Justice Department sued Arizona for placing shipping containers along the US southern border a move taken by thenRepublican Gov. Doug Ducey as an affront to Bidens immigration policies. Arizona eventually agreed to remove the shipping containers. This is a breaking story and will be updated. The State of Texass actions violate federal law raise humanitarian concerns present serious risks to public safety and the environment and may interfere with the federal governments ability to carry out its official duties the letter stated. is reaching out to Abbotts office for comment. has also reached out the Texas Department of Public Safety but has not received a response. The Justice Dept. has sued Arizona last year for placingShipping containers on the US south border. The move was taken by. then Republican Gov. Ducely as an. affront and was seen by some as an attack on the Obama administration’s immigration policies and was eventually removed by the Arizona. Department of Homeland Security. It was later revealed that the containers were actually part of a Customs and Border Protection operation to remove illegal immigrants from the U.S.-Mexico border. It has also been reported that Texas is planning to build a fence along the Texas Mexico border to keep illegal immigrants out of the United States. It is also reported that the state is planning on building a fence on the Texas-Mexico border to stop the flow of illegal immigrants into Texas. The state is also planning on constructing a fence to stop illegal immigrants entering the US from Mexico through the border through Mexico. The Texas State Department has not commented on the reports of mistreatment of migrants which the Justice Dept has called “troubling” The Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has yet to respond to the letter sent to him. The letter was sent Thursday evening according to sources familiar and a letter obtained by . The letter says there is time for the state to respond but there is still time for Texas to respond. The State Department says it has no immediate plans to file a lawsuit against the state of Texas for placing the floating barriers on the Rio Rio Grande. It also says that the actions do not comply with federal law and that they do not pose a threat to the public safety or the environment. It says the actions are not in violation of federal law or the laws of the State of Texas and that the measures are intended to protect the public. The U.N. has not yet commented on this letter. The decision to place the floating barrier on the river has been made by the Texas State and Border Patrol. The Rio Grande is one of the busiest rivers in the world for cross-border crossings. The barrier is expected to be removed in the next few days. It will also be removed from the river by the end of the week. The barriers are expected to go into place in the coming days.