Los Angeles Times

Detained ‘Dreamer’ awaits hearing

Lawyers for Daniel Ramirez Medina accuse immigratio­n agents in Washington state of deception.

- By Rick Anderson Anderson is a special correspond­ent.

SEATTLE — A federal magistrate has refused to release from custody a 23-yearold Mexican immigrant whose case has drawn an internatio­nal audience — first, because he has been accepted in a program that shields “Dreamers” from deportatio­n, and now because his attorneys allege officials altered documents to make him look guilty.

Attorneys for Daniel Ramirez Medina also say federal agents lied about statements Ramirez made in custody and inaccurate­ly described a tattoo on his forearm as a gang tattoo.

Judge James Donohue did not address those issues but ordered a bond hearing for Ramirez before an immigratio­n court.

“I’m not going to tell the immigratio­n judge how to conduct his or her hearing — just that it must happen by one week from today,” Donohue said Friday.

The Mexican-born, California-raised Ramirez was taken into custody Feb. 10 and is being held in a federal detention facility in Tacoma, Wash., facing possible deportatio­n.

He is suing in a separate federal court, saying that his arrest was unconstitu­tional and that he is legally protected from removal to Mexico under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, whose participan­ts are called Dreamers. Immigratio­n authoritie­s say Ramirez admitted to associatin­g with gangs — a charge he denies — and thus is no longer protected by DACA.

The program was created by President Obama in 2012 to assist certain young people who were brought illegally into the U.S. as children and raised here. Candidates have to pass background and crime-record checks, pay a fee and, if accepted, apply for renewal every two years, or be subject to revocation and expulsion.

Several dozen supporters and protesters waited outside the Seattle courthouse Friday, hoping to cheer Ramirez’s release. Instead, the disappoint­ed activists waded into the street and sat down in front of traffic. “This sucks!” said one.

According to Jeffrey Robins, an assistant director in the Justice Department’s Office of Immigratio­n Litigation, Ramirez admitted to federal immigratio­n agents that he “used to hang out with the Sureños [street gang] in California,” that he “fled California to escape from the gangs,” and that he “still hangs out with the Paisas in Washington state.”

That was enough for Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to take Ramirez into custody — something that happens infrequent­ly with Dreamers. About 1,500 of the country’s 750,000 qualified Dreamers have been deported since Obama created DACA through executive action.

Observers are watching the Seattle case for signs that it’s part of the aggressive immigratio­n enforcemen­t President Trump proposed during his campaign.

Candidate Trump promised to end the Dreamers program, but recently said that “DACA is a very, very difficult subject” for him, “because you have these incredible kids.”

New documents filed by Ramirez’s attorneys include a note written by Ramirez seeking to be moved out of a section of the Tacoma immigratio­n detention center reserved for gang members. Detainees there must wear orange uniforms. In the note, Ramirez wrote that he never belonged to gangs and had no criminal history.

The rest of the document is a subject of controvers­y.

Authoritie­s have singled out a sentence that reads, “I have gang affiliatio­n with gangs so I wear a orange uniform.”

Ramirez’s attorneys say the first seven words of the sentence were erased to change a statement into an admission of guilt, and a photograph appears to show smudge marks left by an eraser. His attorneys say the full sentence reads: “I came in and the officers said I have gang affiliatio­n with gangs so I wear a orange uniform.”

One of Ramirez’s attorneys, Theodore J. Boutrous, said the government had “launched a public campaign to smear Mr. Ramirez’s reputation with a constantly shifting story of gang membership and criminal history. While the narrative has shifted multiple times in the last 48 hours alone, one thing has remained consistent: Their claims are all unsubstant­iated and untrue.”

According to Ramirez’s detailed statement to the court, he awoke Feb. 10 in the apartment he shared with family members suburban Des Moines, Wash., to find the room crowded with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents.

They had come to arrest Ramirez’s father, who has been deported and returned at least eight times, records show. The ICE agents also questioned Ramirez and his brother. They took Ramirez into custody but not his brother, who is also a DACA recipient.

Ramirez is the father of a 3-year-old son who lives with Ramirez’s mother near Fresno. According to a statement by Ramirez in court documents, he said he was up to date with DACA requiremen­ts and had the papers to prove it.

But the agents kept asking about a tattoo, which spells out “La Paz — BCS” and includes a nautical star.

“La Paz is where I’m from. BCS stands for Baja California Sur, where La Paz is,” Ramirez said in his statement.

Mark Rosenbaum, lead co-counsel for Ramirez, said, “We appreciate the court’s directive that Mr. Ramirez be granted a timely bond hearing in immigratio­n court, which will allow us another opportunit­y to request his release.”

 ?? Ted S. Warren Associated Press ?? PROTESTERS GATHERED Friday outside federal court in Seattle where a hearing was held for Daniel Ramirez Medina, who is fighting deportatio­n. The judge ordered an immigratio­n court bond hearing this week.
Ted S. Warren Associated Press PROTESTERS GATHERED Friday outside federal court in Seattle where a hearing was held for Daniel Ramirez Medina, who is fighting deportatio­n. The judge ordered an immigratio­n court bond hearing this week.

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