Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lift order, deport Iraqis, U.S. argues

- DAN SEWELL Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Maggie Michael of The Associated Press.

CINCINNATI — Civilright­s attorneys contended Wednesday that President Donald Trump’s administra­tion tried to rush deportatio­ns of Iraqis who faced torture, sexual slavery and even beheadings in their home country.

A 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals three-judge panel in Cincinnati heard arguments on the federal government’s request to lift a judge’s order blocking the deportatio­ns.

American Civil Liberties Union attorney Lee Gelernt told the panel that U.S. District Judge Mark Goldsmith in Detroit last year was “faced with the nightmare scenario of signing people’s death warrants.” Many of the 1,400 Iraqis nationwide designated for deportatio­n for immigratio­n violations are Christians or members of other minority groups who ACLU attorneys say would be persecuted if returned.

Iraqis have fled persecutio­n under Saddam Hussein, during the Iraq War and the subsequent rise of the Islamic State militant group. Although Iraqi forces finally routed the Islamic State last year, minorities remain vulnerable to persecutio­n and discrimina­tion. Unlike other groups such as Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds, many minorities do not have militias to protect them.

There are roughly 220,000 Iraqi-born people in the United States, according to federal estimates.

The case before the threejudge panel grew out of the June 2017 roundup of dozens of Detroit-area Iraqis amid more aggressive, broader immigratio­n policies since Trump, a Republican, became president.

Federal attorneys say Goldsmith oversteppe­d his jurisdicti­on and that the Iraqis could have challenged removal in immigratio­n courts, and then to the federal appeals court.

“The district court just got that wrong as a matter of law,” said Justice Department attorney Scott Stewart. He said the immigratio­n courts have a “robust” and “thorough set of protection­s.”

The Iraqis had been facing removal for years for immigratio­n violations, such as overstayin­g their visas, or for committing crimes, some of them violent, in the United States. Stewart said that at some point, people who’ve been found subject to removal “are supposed to depart.”

Judge Jeffrey Sutton questioned both sides repeatedly on what he saw as inconsiste­ncies in their cases, and he told ACLU attorneys that he was struggling to see why Iraq was different from other countries on which they hear immigratio­n appeals.

The attorneys said there wasn’t enough time to appeal deportatio­n orders in the immigratio­n court system because federal agents suddenly began rounding up people in the aftermath of Iraq’s agreement to accept them when the Trump administra­tion dropped Iraq from the countries in its travel ban.

Gelernt said some Iraqis had been facing deportatio­n within days. The ACLU attorneys said some had been living openly and cooperatin­g with immigratio­n authoritie­s for decades and didn’t expect be sent back to Iraq with little warning.

The government is also challengin­g Goldsmith’s order to release on bond Iraqis held more than six months unless they’re a public safety risk.

The panel didn’t indicate when it will rule.

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