Porterville Recorder

Supreme Court wrestles with case on detention of immigrants

- By JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court wrestled Wednesday with a case about the government's ability to detain certain immigrants after they've served sentences for committing crimes in the United States. Several justices expressed concerns with the government's reading of immigratio­n law.

Justice Stephen Breyer seemed perhaps the most sympatheti­c to the arguments of immigrants in the case. The immigrants, mostly green-card holders, say they should get hearings where they can argue for their release while deportatio­n proceeding­s against them are ongoing. Breyer noted that the United States "gives every triple ax murderer a bail hearing."

While members of the court's conservati­ve majority seemed more inclined than its liberal members to back the government, both of President Donald Trump's appointees asked questions that made it less clear how they might ultimately rule.

The issue in the case before the justices has to do with the detention of noncitizen­s who have committed a broad range of crimes that make them deportable. Immigratio­n law tells the government to pick those people up when they are released from federal or state prisons and jails and then hold them without bond hearings while an immigratio­n court decides whether they should be deported.

But those affected by the law aren't always picked up immediatel­y and are sometimes not detained until years later. They argue that unless they're picked up essentiall­y within a day of being released, they're entitled to a hearing where they can argue that they aren't a danger to the community and are not likely to flee. If a judge agrees, they can stay out of custody while their deportatio­n case goes forward. That's the same hearing rule that applies to other noncitizen­s the government is trying to deport.

The Trump administra­tion argues, as the Obama administra­tion did, against hearings for those convicted of crimes and affected by the law. The government reads immigratio­n law to say that detention is mandatory for those people regardless of when they are picked up.

Sounding sympatheti­c to the immigrants' arguments, Breyer asked a lawyer arguing for the government whether he thought "a person 50 years later, who is on his death bed, after stealing some bus transfers" is still subject to mandatory detention without a hearing. But Breyer also seemed to suggest that the government might be able to hold noncitizen­s without bond hearings if they were picked up more than a day after leaving custody, maybe up to six months.

Justice Neil Gorsuch also seemed to have concerns about timing, asking a government lawyer about a hypothetic­al case in which the government knew someone's whereabout­s but waited 30 years to take that person into custody.

"Is there any limit on the government's power?" Gorsuch asked.

Later, though, he told an attorney arguing for the immigrants in the case that he saw a problem with her reading of the law.

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