Los Angeles Times

Justices to hear immigratio­n cases

Supreme Court agrees to rule on Trump’s border wall funding and his ‘ Remain in Mexico’ policy.

- By David G. Savage and Molly O’Toole

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed Monday to render a verdict on the legality of President Trump’s use of military funds to pay for an expanded border wall as well as his “Remain in Mexico” policy preventing migrants seeking asylum from waiting in the United States until their claims are heard, instead forcing them back to Mexico.

The justices said they would hear the administra­tion’s appeal in both cases, Trump vs. Sierra Club regarding the border wall and Wolf vs. Innovation Law Lab on the “Remain in Mexico” policy. They set arguments for early next year, likely releasing a decision in June.

The pair of cases could prove highly significan­t if Trump is reelected next month. But they may well be dismissed if an incoming

Biden administra­tion revokes the disputed Trump policies, as the former vice president and Democratic nominee has pledged to do.

Trump’s hard- line policies on immigratio­n have been declared illegal by federal judges in California. They said the president did not have the authority acting on his own to defy Congress and transfer billions in Pentagon funds to pay for building more border walls. And they ruled that the asylum laws did not authorize border agents to turn away migrants who asked for protection.

The administra­tion lost on both issues in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

But in both instances, Trump’s lawyers won emergency orders from the Supreme Court that allowed his policies to go into effect while the legal disputes proceeded.

In the meantime, thousands of additional asylum seekers have been forced back to Mexico, with many of the roughly 70,000 total put into the program waiting upward of a year in border cities that the U. S. State Department assesses as some of the most dangerous in the world. The administra­tion has continued to push asylum seekers back to Mexico despite more than 1,000 documented assaults, rapes and kidnapping­s of those awaiting U. S. hearings under the policy, officially termed the “Migrant Protection Protocols.”

The administra­tion has simultaneo­usly been tightening border policies in response to the COVID- 19 pandemic.

It extended the closure of the U. S. Southern border to “nonessenti­al” travel through at least Nov. 21, postponed many immigratio­n court cases indefinite­ly and expelled at the border nearly 200,000 other migrants since March, including asylum seekers and unaccompan­ied children.

Border wall constructi­on has continued, paid for through the diversion of $ 15 billion in U. S. taxpayer funds and not by Mexico, despite Trump’s promise. Most of the work involved replacing hundreds of miles of dilapidate­d and outdated border fencing.

Trump has added only about 10 new miles of barrier where none existed before, according to the latest report from U. S. Customs and

Border Protection.

The oral arguments at the Supreme Court would probably be scheduled for late February.

Judy Rabinowitz, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney, said the Supreme Court should rule that the administra­tion has been violating the asylum laws.

“Asylum seekers face grave danger every day this illegal and depraved policy is in effect. The courts have repeatedly ruled against it, and the Supreme Court should as well,” she said in a statement.

The Sierra Club had sued to halt the expansion of the border wall.

“The Trump administra­tion has misused military funds for the constructi­on of a wall that has caused lasting harm to the ecosystems and communitie­s of the borderland­s, damaged sacred Indigenous lands beyond repair, and destroyed wildlife and habitats along the border,” said Gloria Smith, a managing attorney at the Sierra Club.

“Stopping this wasteful and irreversib­le damage is long overdue, and we look forward to making our case before the Supreme Court.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States