Business World

Trump wants illegal aliens deported with ‘no judges or court cases’

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said on Sunday that people who enter the United States illegally should be sent back immediatel­y to where they came from without any judicial process, likening them to invaders who are trying to “break into” the country.

His proposal drew immediate criticism from legal analysts and immigrant rights advocates who said it would violate the US Constituti­on’s due process provision, which applies to citizens and noncitizen­s alike.

In a series of tweets on Sunday, Mr. Trump said: “We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country. When somebody comes in, we must immediatel­y, with no Judges or Court Cases, bring them back from where they came.”

“Cannot accept all of the people trying to break into our Country. Strong Borders, No Crime!”

It was unclear if Mr. Trump was advocating an expansion of the provision that allows expedited removals of illegal immigrants at or near the US border, a policy his administra­tion has embraced since he took office.

Nor did Mr. Trump differenti­ate between illegal immigrants and people who entered the United States to seek asylum protection.

The White House did not return a call seeking clarificat­ion.

“The president of the United States has just forcefully proposed the end of political asylum and no due process for migrants,” Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, wrote on Twitter.

Lee Gelernt, the deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, told Reuters: “The administra­tion cannot simply get rid of all process for immigrants. The due process clause absolutely applies. It’s not a choice.”

Authoritie­s can bypass due process protection­s with the expedited removals policy that allows quick deportatio­ns if an immigrant is apprehende­d within 100 miles (160 km) of the border and has been in the country less than 14 days. Those seeking asylum must be granted a hearing.

Mr. Trump’s tweets on Sunday came after a week of global outcry over images and video of crying children and their distraught parents separated at the US-Mexico border.

Critics in Mr. Trump’s Republican Party, as well as his wife and daughter, urged him to abandon the policy.

The president buckled to the pressure on Wednesday, issuing an executive order that ended the separation­s.

But the government has yet to reunite more than 2,000 children with their parents.

FUMING

But Mr. Trump’s frustratio­n over the issue only grew.

He has issued a drumbeat of criticism of the immigratio­n system and Democrats in Congress, while using increasing­ly harsh terms such as “invasion” and “infestatio­n” to describe illegal immigratio­n.

“Here, I think he is making it clear, he just doesn’t want anybody here. He wants people to just be sent back, no matter what,” said Jorge Baron, executive director for the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, who compared Sunday’s tweets with comments Mr. Trump was reported to have made in January about immigrants from “shithole” countries.

While some who advocate for stricter immigratio­n rules have argued that people are making fraudulent asylum claims or abusing the loopholes in US immigratio­n laws, Baron said Mr. Trump’s views went way beyond those arguments.

Mr. Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy of prosecutin­g adults for entering the country illegally entails a process that typically takes many months.

That required children to be separated from parents because they are not legally allowed to be kept in detention for more than 20 days.

Keeping the children with their migrant parents as they await court proceeding­s faces obstacles, however, including the lack of sufficient housing, a paucity of immigratio­n judges and a daunting backlog of cases.

Under expedited removal proceeding­s — which are used most commonly at ports of entry — an immigratio­n official can evaluate an immigrant’s claim and reject it with no involvemen­t by an immigratio­n judge or a review board.

The Mr. Trump administra­tion called last year for the expansion of the expedited removals program to immigrants who have been in the country illegally for up to two years.

There is an exception from expedited removal for those with a credible fear of returning home.

Lindsay Harris, an assistant professor of law at the University of the District of Columbia, said those with no credible fear could still see a judge, while those with such a fear could begin a long legal process that eventually could result in asylum and applying for a work permit.

“It’s already an extremely truncated process,” the ACLU’s Gelernt said.

“The president’s suggestion that there is a ton of process for these individual­s is simply wrong. There are already people being removed with a truncated process.” —

 ??  ?? A HONDURAN MOTHER and her three-year-old daughter seeking asylum wait on the Mexican side of the Brownsvill­e-Matamoros Internatio­nal Bridge after being denied entry by US Customs and Border Protection officers near Brownsvill­e, Texas, US in this June...
A HONDURAN MOTHER and her three-year-old daughter seeking asylum wait on the Mexican side of the Brownsvill­e-Matamoros Internatio­nal Bridge after being denied entry by US Customs and Border Protection officers near Brownsvill­e, Texas, US in this June...

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