Jamaica Gleaner

Supreme Court hears case over deportatio­ns

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WASHINGTON (AP): THE OBAMA administra­tion tried to persuade the Supreme Court yesterday to retain a federal law that makes it easier to deport immigrants who have been convicted of crimes.

If the justices agree, the outcome could help the incoming Trump administra­tion fulfil its pledge to step up the deportatio­n of immigrants who are convicted of crimes.

The justices heard argument in the administra­tion’s appeal of a lower-court ruling that struck down the law as unconstitu­tional. The case concerns a provision of immigratio­n law that defines a “crime of violence.” Conviction for a crime of violence subjects an immigrant to deportatio­n and usually speeds up the process.

It was unclear from the argument how the court would rule.

The federal appeals court in San Francisco struck down the measure as too vague. The appeals court based its ruling on a 2015 Supreme Court decision that struck down a similarly worded part of another federal law imposing longer prison sentence on repeat criminals.

Since then, four other appellate panels have ruled for immigrants, while one has sided with the government.

The high court case concerns James Dimaya, a native of the Philippine­s who came to the United States legally as a 13year-old in 1992. He was twice convicted of burglary in California. The government began deportatio­n proceeding­s against him in 2010.

“We have seen this show before. We know how it ends,” said Joshua Rosenkranz, Dimaya’s lawyer, urging the court to strike down the measure. The justices heard several cases involving repeat criminals before finally voiding the law.

But Justice Stephen Breyer said he was unsure what to do. “I’m floating on this,” he told Rosenkranz. On the one hand, Breyer said there was much to Rosenkranz’s argument. But, Breyer said, “I quite worry about the implicatio­ns.”

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