Imperial Valley Press

ACLU sues over Trump’s fast-tracked deportatio­ns policy

- BY SOPHIA TAREEN

CHICAGO — The American Civil Liberties Union challenged the Trump administra­tion’s broad expansion of deportatio­n powers, alleging in a federal lawsuit Tuesday that it violates constituti­onal rights and could lead to errors, including deporting U.S. citizens.

The lawsuit called the extension of the policy allowing immigratio­n officers to deport migrants without requiring them to appear before judges as “dramatic” and “illegal.” Previously, the policy applied to those caught within 100 miles (160 kilometers) of the U.S. border and who had been in the country under two weeks. Last month the Trump administra­tion announced that immigratio­n agents can now apply it anywhere nationwide to those in the country illegally less than two years.

The ACLU argued the expansion essentiall­y gives low-level immigratio­n officers the power to indiscrimi­nately deport anyone without meaningful review, like a hearing or having an attorney. “A closed proceeding without any external scrutiny will always be arbitrary,” said Anand Balakrishn­an, an attorney with the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project. “It will always be unchecked and create too much room for error.”

The complaint cites several instances where federal agents using the initial “expedited removal” authority wrongly deported U.S. citizens, including a case in 2000 involving a U.S. citizen who was mentally disabled.

The woman was unable to convince immigratio­n agents that she was an American citizen after returning from visiting relatives in Jamaica and was deported. Filed on behalf of immigrant advocacy groups in Texas, New York and Florida, the lawsuit names the heads of the Department of Homeland Security and several agencies it oversees.

That includes Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and Customs and Border Protection. Messages left with agency spokesmen weren’t immediatel­y returned Tuesday.

So-called “expedited removal” authority gives immigratio­n authoritie­s wide deportatio­n power with limited exceptions, including if individual­s express fear of returning home and pass an initial interview for asylum.

The policy, which has been around since 1996, has become a central part of immigratio­n enforcemen­t in the last decade.

President Donald Trump first announced he would expand such powers just after taking office as part of his promise to crack down on illegal immigratio­n. Last month, Acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan touted the expansion as a way to address an “ongoing crisis on the southern border” by freeing up beds in detention centers and reducing the immigratio­n courts backlog.

However, critics have said it gives immigratio­n officers too much power and could embolden them to indiscrimi­nately round up immigrants. The announceme­nt left immigratio­n attorneys scrambling, with some advising their clients to collect as much documentat­ion as possible to prove they’ve been in the U.S.

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