Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Travel-ban ruling vowed before Christmas

Critics tell judge Trump’s order is splitting families, endangerin­g people

- MARTHA BELLISLE

SEATTLE — A federal judge said he would decide before Christmas whether to stop a travel ban on certain refugees after hearing arguments Thursday that the ban is separating families and putting some refugees in danger.

Lawyers from the ACLU and Jewish Family Service asked U.S. District Judge James Robart for an injunction on a ban President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has placed on refugees from some Muslim-majority countries.

The ban went into effect in October after Trump issued an executive order resuming the refugee program “with enhanced vetting capabiliti­es.”

The day before that order, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Acting Homeland Security Secretary Elaine Duke and Director of National Intelligen­ce Daniel Coats sent a memo to Trump saying certain refugees must be banned unless additional security measures are implemente­d.

The banned refugees include the spouses and minor children of refugees who have already settled in the United States. The action also suspended the refugee program for people coming from 11 countries, nine of which are mostly Muslim.

The American Civil Liberties Union argued the memo provided no evidence for why additional security was needed and didn’t specify a time frame for implementi­ng the changes.

“Refugee resettleme­nt is one of our proudest humanitari­an achievemen­ts,” Jewish Family Service lawyer Mariko Hirose said after the hearing. “We as Americans cannot let this administra­tion destroy our refugee program and repeat the worst of this country’s history by letting bigotry turn away those who need our help the most.”

August Flentje, with the Department of Justice, told Robart that the ban is temporary and “is a reasonable and appropriat­e way for agency heads to tackle gaps” in the screening process.

But Robart questioned whether Trump administra­tion policies were trampling the Administra­tive Procedures Act, which says a process must be followed before shutting down a program.

The judge also questioned whether the Department of Homeland Security has the authority to stop the refugee program, when the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act, passed by Congress, mandates the reunificat­ion of the families of refugees settled in this country.

After peppering the lawyers with questions, Robart said he is taking the motion for a preliminar­y injunction under advisement and would issue a ruling by Christmas.

The ACLU and Jewish Family Service lawsuits were consolidat­ed and represent refugees who have been blocked from entering the country. Their lawyers say the ban on entry is causing irreparabl­e harm and is putting some lives at risk.

The ACLU represents a Somali man living in Washington state who is trying to bring his family to the United States. They’ve gone through extensive vetting, have passed security and medical clearances, and just need travel papers, but those were denied after the ban.

The delay creates major problems, Hirose said, because the medical clearances are only valid for a certain period of time, and the family will have to travel 500 miles over difficult terrain to get new medical certificat­ions if the ban is not lifted soon.

The man “unquestion­ably has a statutory entitlemen­t under the [Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act] to be reunited with his family,” but the administra­tion has denied him of that right, the ACLU said.

Two other refugees included in the Jewish Family Service lawsuit are former Iraqi interprete­rs for the U.S. Army whose lives were put at risk for their service.

Another is a transgende­r woman in Egypt “living in such extremely dangerous circumstan­ces that the U.S. government itself had expedited her case until the ban came down,” Hirose said.

Jane Doe 5 is a single woman in Iraq, Hirose said. Her husband divorced her after she was kidnapped and raped by militants because she worked with an American company. Her family is in the U.S. but she’s stranded by the ban, Hirose said.

Rabbi Will Berkovitz said after the hearing that Trump’s order directly harms the people Jewish Family Service tries to help.

“We know exactly how perilous it is when this great country of ours shuts its doors to the most vulnerable based on their religion,” he said. “The executive order and the actions of this administra­tion are at odds with both our core Jewish values and American values.”

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