The Manila Times

US Supreme Court reviews detention for immigrants

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: The US Supreme Court on Wednesday ( Thursday in Manila) heard arguments about whether the authoritie­s have the right to force thousands of legal immigrants to endure months or even years of detention without a hearing.

The issue has taken on special significan­ce following the presidenti­al election of Donald Trump, who has vowed to crack down on illegal immigratio­n and ramp up deportatio­ns when he takes office in January.

The case concerns a class action lawsuit filed by Alejandro Rodriguez and several other immigrants, and supported by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), a leading civil rights group.

Rodriguez arrived from Mexico as a child, attained legal permanent resident status and worked as a dental assistant.

After he was convicted for driving a stolen car and arrested for drug possession, the authoritie­s sought to deport him.

He spent three years behind bars before ultimately prevailing in his fight to remain in the country.

Millions of legal immigrants like him are under threat of being deported even for minor offenses -- or detained indefinite­ly if they contest expulsion orders.

Another category of immigrants under Supreme Court review on Wednesday are those who have sought asylum in the United States claiming fear of prosecutio­n in their home countries.

The example of Ahilan Nadarajah is telling.

Repeatedly tortured as a member of an ethnic minority in his homeland Sri Lanka, he sought asylum in the United States in 2001.

The authoritie­s detained him, and he remained behind bars for four years and five months as one release request after another was rejected. He eventually received American citizenshi­p.

Flight risk?

“What matters about this case is that you’ve got people who are fighting their deportatio­n, who are being locked up without bond hearings,” Judy Rabinovitz, a member of the ACLU legal team, told Agence France-Presse.

“Many of them have strong challenges to removal and if they had a bond hearing they wouldn’t be found to be a danger of flight risk,” she added.

The eight justices currently on the nation’s highest court appeared receptive to the ACLU’s arguments, criticizin­g the excessive lengths of detention imposed on immigrants.

But they expressed doubts about an automatic introducti­on of a possible bond hearing after six months of detention.

The government’s representa­tive defended the applicatio­n of the law as it stands.

“Congress provided extensive, substantiv­e and procedural protection­s for aliens whom the government wishes to remove,” acting Solicitor General Ian Gershengor­n argued.

“But at the same time, [it] addressed the real concerns about recidivism and flight risk by providing for mandatory detention during removal proceeding­s for certain categories of criminal aliens and aliens arriving at our shores.”

With cases averaging a reported 13 months, and conditions in detention centers facing criticism, the authoritie­s have been under pressure to find a solution.

“Someone has to look at the detention and decide, is this a detention which remains reasonable?” ACLU lawyer Ahilan Arulananth­am said.

Detention equals prison

Prolonged detention is often indistingu­ishable from penitentia­ry time: immigrants are forced to wear prison garb, they can be placed in handcuffs and are subjected to standard prison surveillan­ce.

They can even be placed in solitary confinemen­t.

Family visits are often conducted through glass panes or by video.

“One of my clients [a detained immigrant], her kids came to visit her and she was not allowed to touch them, no contact,” Rabinovitz said.

Donald Trump took a hard line against immigrants during his campaign, pledging to expel millions of undocument­ed immigrants.

Despite current administra­tive decrees under President Barack Obama aimed at bringing illegal immigrants out of the shadows, he will leave office having deported for more people than any of his predecesso­rs.

At least 2.4 million have been escorted to the border or sent back to their home countries through immigratio­n orders over the past eight years.

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