Call & Times

Lawyers try to aid man left without a country

Detained man needs nation willing to accept him before he can be deported

-

BOSTON ( AP) — Lawyers in Massachuse­tts are seeking the release of a man they say is being unlawfully detained by federal immigratio­n officials while they try to find a country to deport him to.

The case involves Sreynuon Lunn, 32, who was born in a Thai refugee camp to Cambodian parents fleeing the Khmer Rouge and brought to the United States as a seven-month-old child.

Lunn was legally allowed into the country as a refugee and given lawful permanent resident status.

Last October, Lunn was charged with unarmed robbery and held until February for a trial date.

The charges stemming from that arrest were ultimately dismissed, but the court ordered Lunn held on a so-called Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detainer request, overruling a request by his lawyers that he be released.

Immigratio­n agents arrived several hours after the charges were dismissed to take Lunn into custody.

Detainer requests typically ask federal, state, local and tribal law enforcemen­t agencies to give at least 48 hours' notice before an individual is released from a jail — or to hold the person for up to 48 hours after they would normally be released.

Lawyers for Lunn last month argued before the Massachuse­tts Supreme Judicial Court that the practice of holding individual­s on detainer requests violates both the Fourth Amendment of the U. S. Constituti­on, which bars against unreasonab­le searches and seizures of individual­s, and similar provisions in the Massachuse­tts Constituti­on.

The Department of Justice defends the use of detainer requests.

That case is still pending.

On Monday, the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachuse­tts filed a petition in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachuse­tts seeking Lunn's release.

They say the Department of Homeland Security has designated Cambodia as Lunn's country of origin even though government officials there have denied Lunn is a Cambodian citizen for nine years and have refused to issue him travel papers.

Thai officials have also said they don't consider Lunn a citizen of Thailand.

"If the government cannot deport Mr. Lunn, it has to let him go," said Matthew Segal, legal director at the ACLU of Massachuse­tts.

His attorneys also want the court to order immigratio­n officials not to take Lunn back into custody unless they have a country to deport him to.

Shawn Neudauer, a spokesman with Homeland Security, said ICE "declines comment at this time as the matter is currently pending before the courts."

It's not the first time the government has attempted to deport Lunn, who has raised two children born in the United States.

Immigratio­n officials first tried to deport Lunn in 2009 after he was convicted of an aggravated felony.

Lunn's lawyers said Lunn contacted the Cambodian Embassy in Washington, D. C. multiple times, but embassy personnel told him that they were unwilling to issue the necessary travel documents because Lunn was not a Cambodian citizen.

Homeland Security officials ultimately released him.

The pattern would be repeated two more times, according to court records.

Republican Gov. Charlie Baker last year allowed the state police to temporaril­y detain some people wanted by federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, reversing a previous policy put in place during the administra­tion of former Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States