Los Angeles Times

Afghan family is held at LAX

Judge stops mother, three children from being sent to a Texas detention center.

- By Ruben Vives and Paloma Esquivel

A federal judge stops a mother and three children from being sent to a Texas detention center.

A federal judge has issued a temporary restrainin­g order preventing immigratio­n agents from transferri­ng outside Southern California an Afghan family that attorneys say had been granted special immigratio­n visas but whose members were detained when they arrived in Los Angeles.

The order, issued Saturday, also says the government cannot bar the family members from access to their attorneys.

The father, mother and their three children — ages 7, 6 and 8 months — arrived at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport on Thursday afternoon for a connecting flight to Seattle, where they planned to resettle, but were detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said Talia Inlender, a senior staff attorney with Public Counsel, a nonprofit organizati­on that provides free legal services.

The family had been extensivel­y vetted and approved for the visas because of the father’s work with the U.S. government, according to a federal court petition filed Saturday seeking release of the family.

In a written statement, Carl Rusnok, a spokesman for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, said ICE would “fully comply with the March 4 judicial order and all other legal requiremen­ts.”

In response to a question asking why the family was initially detained, Rusnok said that statement would be the only informatio­n pro-

vided at this time.

After being detained at LAX for two days, the father was taken to a detention center in Orange County. The mother and three children were taken to a similar facility in downtown L.A.

On Saturday morning, a habeas corpus petition was filed in U.S. District Court on behalf of the family by Public Counsel and the firm Gibson Dunn.

Then, at a brief meeting with the mother, attorneys learned that she and her children were to be taken to a family detention center in Texas, Inlender said.

Attorneys then filed an emergency motion for a restrainin­g order in federal court to prevent the government from transferri­ng the family out of state. U.S. District Judge Josephine Staton granted the temporary restrainin­g order Saturday night.

The names of the detainees have not been released because attorneys have not received approval to make them public and because it could put the family in harm’s way.

Inlender said the father had been employed by the U.S. government in Afghanista­n and he and his family had received special immigratio­n visas, or SIVs.

The process for obtaining those visas involves intensive vetting, including interviews, security checks, medical examinatio­ns and fingerprin­ts — as well as a finding that the applicant has experience­d a serious threat because of his or her work with the U.S. government, according to the petition.

“It shocks the conscience,” Inlender said in a phone interview with The Times. “These are the people we should be putting out the welcome mat for. They’re putting their own lives and families at risk, and instead of providing them that welcome mat we are detaining them.”

The case comes on the heels of President Trump’s controvers­ial and hotly contested executive order temporaril­y restrictin­g travelers from seven mostly Muslim nations — Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen — from entering the United States. The Jan. 27 order did not include Afghanista­n.

The travel ban immediatel­y sent airports into chaos, spurred nationwide protests and was challenged in court by civil rights organizati­ons and state attorneys general.

A federal judge in Seattle issued a stay on Trump’s order, and a federal appeals court in San Francisco upheld the stay.

In response to the court decision, Trump has said he plans to release a new executive order, possibly as early as Monday, that would thoroughly vet travelers while addressing safety concerns.

A hearing on the family’s case is set for Monday afternoon.

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