San Diego Union-Tribune

COURT URGED TO DENY BOND HEARINGS FOR IMMIGRANTS

Biden administra­tion lawyers want rulings overturned in cases

- BY DAVID G. SAVAGE Savage writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Biden administra­tion lawyers urged the Supreme Court on Tuesday to deny bond hearings and a chance to go free to immigrants who are being held for deportatio­n after returning illegally to the United States.

In a pair of cases, the Justice Department called on the court to overturn rulings by judges in California and Pennsylvan­ia, who said such immigrants deserve a bond hearing if they are held for more than six months.

The judges said some detainees feared they would be subjected to violence and torture if sent home, and it could take a year or more to resolve their legal claims. In such cases, they said, the immigrants should have a chance to be released if they are not likely to flee and represent no danger to public safety.

But the Justice Department lawyers said the law says immigrants in this category are to be held until they are deported.

They were “already removed, and they illegally reentered the United States,” said Austin Raynor, an assistant to the U.S. solicitor general. “We know, by definition, those noncitizen­s pose a greater risk of flight based on their past conduct.”

This is the third time in recent years that the high court has tried to resolve the conflict between the government’s wish to hold immigrants who face deportatio­n and the pleas of civil libertaria­ns who say immigrants should not be jailed indefinite­ly while their claims move slowly through the legal system.

The American Civil Liberties Union said the Biden administra­tion “is on the wrong side in this crucial immigratio­n case.” But the Justice Department noted the high court had rejected a right to a bond hearing for other detained immigrants in 2018 and again last year.

Looming over the arguments was an opinion written 20 years ago by Justice Stephen Breyer. Speaking for a 5-4 majority, he said then that the Constituti­on would not allow for holding people indefinite­ly in jail without a hearing, and the same is true for immigrants who are detained. In that case, Zadvydas vs. Davis, the court said immigrants usually must be given a hearing if they are held more than six months.

The justices and lawyers spent much of their time Tuesday debating whether to follow the strict words of the immigratio­n laws or the Constituti­on’s guarantee of due process of law.

Breyer thought the court had all but decided the issue.

Under the Constituti­on, “everybody gets a bail hearing that you are going to detain for a significan­t period of time,” he said.

Curtis Gannon, another lawyer in the solicitor general’s office, said: “Congress can make rules for noncitizen­s that it can’t for citizens, and detention during removal proceeding­s is constituti­onally permissibl­e.”

But Matt Adams, an immigrant rights attorney from Seattle, urged the court to uphold the 9th Circuit’s decision and permit bond hearings for immigrants who face long detention before their claims are resolved.

Most of the court’s conservati­ves said they were skeptical of interpreti­ng the law to require bail hearings for these detainees.

Both the 3rd Circuit Court in Philadelph­ia and the 9th Circuit Court in San Francisco upheld decisions by judges that allowed some of the detained immigrants to go free while their claims worked their way through the immigratio­n orders.

The Trump administra­tion appealed those decisions in 2020, and the court agreed to hear the cases last summer. The Biden administra­tion took up the defense of the government’s position in both cases. They are Johnson vs. Arteaga-Martinez and Garland vs. Gonzalez.

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