Judge Gives OK for
Illegals to Sue United States
(San Francisco Chronicle) - A Bay Area federal judge
has given the go-ahead to a nationwide suit by thousands of immigrants who seek
asylum in the United States and accuse the government of illegally keeping them
in jail for months.
In rejecting the Obama administration’s attempt to dismiss
the suit, U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of Oakland ruled that
federal law requires officials to decide within 10 days whether an undocumented
immigrant has a “reasonable fear” of persecution or torture if deported.
Immigrants are held without bail while awaiting those decisions.
The law says a decision must be made within 10 days unless
“exceptional circumstances” exist. Justice Department lawyers argued that
immigration officials have the sole authority to define exceptional
circumstances and are not bound by any deadline.
But Gonzalez Rogers, in a ruling Friday, said the law’s
meaning is clear: Decisions are required within 10 days except in rare cases
where circumstances justify a delay.
Government records since 2006 show that “the exceptional
appears to have become the norm,” the judge said. Out of 2,583 reasonable-fear
determinations nationwide in the first six months of this year, she said, only
78 were issued within 10 days.
“The (immigration) agency appears to have ignored the
regulatory deadline altogether,” Gonzalez Rogers said. She said the suit could
proceed as a nationwide class action, since the government’s practices are the
same in every state.
The suit was filed in April on behalf of undocumented
immigrants who have been deported but re-enter the United States and say they
would be persecuted in their homeland.
To avoid immediate deportation and remain eligible to seek
asylum, they must convince either an asylum officer or an immigration judge
that they have a reasonable fear of persecution.
Despite the 10-day legal deadline, the suit said, decisions
last year took an average of 111 days. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services,
which employs the asylum officers, has a policy that “encourages” them to
decide 85 percent of their cases within 90 days.
Michael Kaufman, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer,
contrasted the administration’s policy on the asylum hearings with President
Obama’s recent orders protecting several million unauthorized immigrants from
deportation, mostly migrants who entered the U.S. as youngsters or parents of
legal residents.
“At a time of some progress in the immigration system, this
ruling highlights a troubling trend that has been left unaddressed by the
president’s executive action,” Kaufman said.
Source:http://www.teaparty.org/judge-gives-ok-for-illegals-to-sue-united-states-69626/
http://www.sfgate.com/nation/article/Immigrants-can-challenge-months-long-confinement-5920616.php
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