Gulf News

‘No judges or court cases’

US PRESIDENT SAYS CANNOT ALLOW PEOPLE TO INVADE COUNTRY

- BY KATIE ROGERS AND SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

Trump says people who cross into US should be sent back immediatel­y without due process |

US President Donald Trump unleashed an aggressive attack on Sunday on unauthoris­ed immigrants and the judicial system that handles them, saying that those who cross into the US illegally should be sent back immediatel­y without due process or an appearance before a judge.

“We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country,” Trump tweeted while on the way to his golf course in Virginia. “When somebody comes in, we must immediatel­y, with no Judges or Court Cases, bring them back from where they came.”

It was another twist in a head-spinning series of developmen­ts on immigratio­n since the administra­tion announced a zero-tolerance policy two months ago, leading to the separation of children from parents who cross the border illegally and an outcry from Democrats and many Republican­s.

Trump signed an executive order to end the separation­s last week, but the sudden shifts have led to confusion along the border about how children and parents will be reunited and to turmoil in Congress as the House prepares to vote on a sweeping immigratio­n bill this week. Still, the president, who has always dug his heels in when criticised, has not backed down from his hard-line talk, even amid a national outcry over a detainment policy that has resulted in the separation of more than 2,300 children from their families.

Backlog

“Our system is a mockery to good immigratio­n policy and Law and Order,” Trump tweeted on Sunday, adding, “Our Immigratio­n policy, laughed at all over the world, is very unfair to all of those people who have gone through the system legally and are waiting on line for years! Immigratio­n must be based on merit.”

But Trump’s call to ignore due process faced both constituti­onal questions and dissension from Republican­s in Congress, some of whom have insisted that the number of judges be increased so migrant families can have their cases heard more quickly. Federal immigratio­n courts faced a backlog of more than 700,000 cases in May, and cases can take months or years to be heard.

Republican Senator Ted Cruz, has proposed doubling the number of judges to roughly 750, while Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, chair of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union that he believes an additional 225 judges are needed. He noted that only 74 of the current immigratio­n judges were serving at the border.

“We need to increase that,” Johnson said. “The Trump administra­tion is going to try and come up with another 15,000 beds for family units. But none of this is easy.”

The House bill up for a vote this week would beef up border security and provide a path to citizenshi­p for the young unauthoris­ed immigrants known as Dreamers, while also effectivel­y codifying Trump’s executive order by allowing migrant families to be detained together indefinite­ly.

Many on Capitol Hill believe legislatio­n is necessary to deal with the order, since it allows indefinite detentions. Under a 1997 consent decree known as the Flores settlement, migrant families can be detained for no more than 20 days, leaving the order’s status in court in doubt.

Trump’s tweets Sunday threw new legal questions into the puzzle. Laurence H. Tribe, a constituti­onal law professor at Harvard, said in an email that the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that “the due process requiremen­ts of the Fifth and 14th Amendments apply to all persons, including those in the US unlawfully.”

“Trump is making the tyrannical claim that he has the right to serve as prosecutor, judge and jury with respect to all those who enter our country,” Tribe said. “That is a breathtaki­ng assertion of unbounded

power — power without any plausible limit.”

The Fifth Amendment mandates the due process of law, and the 14th Amendment, in part, expanded due process rights for immigrants, with case law asserting those rights dating back to 1886. But Justice Department lawyers under both Democratic and Republican administra­tions have argued that non-citizens apprehende­d at the border lack due process protection­s, said Adam Cox, a law professor at New York University, and the Supreme Court has never clearly resolved the dispute.

Since Trump was elected, his administra­tion has been working to expand the terms of a 1996 statute that allows immigratio­n officials to quickly deport unauthoris­ed immigrants as well as those whose papers are believed to be fraudulent. The Trump administra­tion has the ability to expand the statute to encompass the entire country and apply it to any noncitizen who has not been in the country for more than two years, Cox said.

“One of the things that is being considered is an expanded expedited removal to the full statutory limit,” he 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.”

Tweet by President Trump

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