Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. district judge derails Trump deportatio­n move

- ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — A federal judge has blocked the move by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion move to vastly extend authority of immigratio­n officers to deport people without allowing them to appear before judges, the third legal setback for its immigratio­n agenda in one day.

The policy, which was announced in July but hasn’t yet been enforced, would allow fast-track deportatio­ns to apply to anyone in the country illegally for less than two years. Now, they are largely limited to people arrested almost immediatel­y after crossing the Mexican border.

U.S. District Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, ruling late Friday in Washington, said the administra­tion’s expansion of “expedited removal” authority violated procedural requiremen­ts to first seek public comment and ignored flaws in how it has been used on a smaller scale at the border. The shortcomin­gs, which were not challenged by government lawyers, include allegation­s that some people entitled to be in the country were targeted for deportatio­n, translator­s weren’t provided, and authoritie­s made “egregious errors” recording statements of migrants who said they feared persecutio­n or torture if sent back to their homelands.

“With respect to the policy at issue here, the potential devastatio­n is so obvious that [the Department of Homeland Security] can be fairly faulted for its unexplaine­d failure to predict, and attempt to mitigate, the fully foreseeabl­e future floods,” Jackson wrote.

Jackson, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, hasn’t ruled on merits of the case, but her decision prevents the administra­tion from expanding fasttrack authority nationwide while the lawsuit proceeds.

Earlier Friday, a federal judge in Los Angeles blocked new rules that would allow the government to detain immigrant children with their parents indefinite­ly, saying the move conflicted with a 1997 settlement agreement that requires the release of children caught on the border as quickly as possible to relatives in the U.S. and says they can only be held in facilities licensed by a state. The Flores agreement — named for a teenage plaintiff — will remain in place and govern conditions for children in custody, including those with their parents.

Also Friday, another federal judge in Los Angeles blocked U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t from relying solely on flawed databases to target people for being in the country illegally. The decision affects detainers issued by an ICE officer in the federal court system’s Central District of California.

The fast-track deportatio­n powers were created under a 1996 law but didn’t become a major piece of border enforcemen­t until 2004, when Homeland Security said it would be enforced for people who are arrested within two weeks of entering the United States by land and caught within 100 miles (160 kilometers) of the border. Defenders say it relieves burdens on immigratio­n judges — their backlog of cases recently topped 1 million — while critics say it grants too much power to Border Patrol agents and other immigratio­n enforcemen­t officials and jeopardize­s rights to fair treatment.

Keven McAleenan, the acting Homeland Security secretary, said in July that U.S. authoritie­s don’t have space to detain “the vast majority” of people arrested on the border, leading to the release of hundreds of thousands with notices to appear in court. He said expanded authority would likely cause illegal entries to decline and result in people getting more quickly removed from the country than in immigratio­n courts, where cases can take years to resolve.

The Justice Department said Saturday that the judge oversteppe­d her authority and undermined laws enacted by Congress with careful considerat­ion by the administra­tion on how to enforce them. The White House echoed that view in a statement and added that the administra­tion has been trying since its inception to enforce immigratio­n laws and that “misguided lower court decisions have been preventing those laws from ever being enforced—at immense cost to the whole country.”

The potential impact of expanding fast-track powers is difficult to predict. McAleenan said in July that 20,570 people arrested in the nation’s interior from October 2017 through September 2018 had been in the U.S. less than two years, which would make them subject to the new rule. Critics say the impact could be more far-reaching because many in the U.S for longer than two years may be unable to prove they have been in the country that long.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States