Los Angeles Times

Due process for deportees

A Supreme Court decision protects the rights of immigrants at a time when they need the help.

- He Supreme

TCourt on Tuesday ruled in a case from California that if a law is deemed to be so vague that it is impossible for the government to use it to impose a prison sentence, then it is also too vague to be used to deport a lawful permanent resident. It was another welcome recognitio­n by the court that being expelled from this country can be as devastatin­g a consequenc­e as confinemen­t to a prison cell.

By a 5-4 vote, with President Trump’s appointee, Neil M. Gorsuch, joining the court’s four liberals to form a majority, the court ruled in favor of James Garcia Dimaya, a native of the Philippine­s who was admitted to the U.S. as a lawful permanent resident at the age of 13. Dimaya pleaded no contest in 2007 and 2009 to two charges of residentia­l burglary.

Concluding that burglary was a crime of violence and thus an “aggravated felony” under federal immigratio­n law, the Board of Immigratio­n Appeals ruled that Dimaya should be deported. The Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act’s definition of “crimes of violence,” borrowed from federal criminal law, includes felonies that involve “a substantia­l risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used during committing the offense” — a definition that might apply to some burglaries but not others.

Justice Elena Kagan, writing for the court, said that definition was simply too unclear to serve as the basis of a deportatio­n. She said it suffered from the same sort of unconstitu­tional vagueness as a law the court struck down in 2015 in a criminal context. Referring back to the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s decision in that prior case, Kagan wrote: “How does one go about divining the conduct entailed in a crime’s ordinary case? Statistica­l analyses? Surveys? Experts? Google? Gut instinct?”

Kagan noted that the court long had recognized that “grave nature of deportatio­n” and only last year had said that deportatio­n was “a particular­ly severe penalty” that may be of greater concern to a convicted alien than “any potential jail sentence.”

If vagueness in a statute provides grounds to challenge a criminal conviction or a sentence, it ought to be available to immigrants seeking to remain in this country even if they have been convicted of a crime. At a time when the executive branch is giving short shrift to due process for immigrants, it’s gratifying that the court is willing to protect their rights.

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