Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Justices voice doubts about deportatio­n law

- By David G. Savage Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, hearing arguments last week in a California deportatio­n case, signaled it may make it harder for the government to forcibly remove legal immigrants with certain kinds of crimes on their record.

The case involves a Filipino native and a long-time legal resident of the San Francisco area who was convicted of breaking into a garage and an empty house.

At issue is whether crimes such as home burglary, fleeing from the police, money laundering or child abuse can be considered “crimes of violence” that trigger mandatory deportatio­n under federal law.

The ruling could set new rules for the Trump administra­tion if it seeks to forcibly remove legal immigrants who have criminal records.

James Garcia Dimaya was charged with residentia­l burglary under California law and served more than five years in prison. U.S. immigratio­n officials said those crimes were enough to trigger his deportatio­n under the law.

But in their questions, the justices cast doubt on whether his crimes were properly classified as “aggravated felonies.”

If they conclude they were not, their ruling could complicate efforts by the Trump administra­tion to speed up deportatio­ns. President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to speed up deportatio­ns of immigrants here illegally who have been accused or convicted of crimes.

The law in this area is not entirely clear. Beginning in 1988, Congress ordered deportatio­n for non-citizens who are convicted of an “aggravated felony,” and it cited specific examples such as murder and rape. Later the law was expanded to include a general category of “crimes of violence.” This was defined to include offenses that involve a use of physical force or a “substantia­l risk” that force will be used.

Judges have been divided as to what crimes call for deportatio­n. Looming over Tuesday’s argument was an opinion written two years ago by the late Justice Antonin Scalia. He spoke for an 8-1 majority in striking down part of a federal law known as the Armed Career Criminal Act. It called for extra years in prison for people convicted of more than one violent felony.

In that case, the extra prison term was triggered by the defendant’s possession of a shotgun. In frustratio­n, Scalia and his colleagues said the law was unconstitu­tionally vague because they could not decide whether gun possession is itself evidence of a violent crime.

“You could say the exact same thing about burglary,” Justice Elena Kagan said Tuesday. A midday burglary of a home could result in violence, she said, but perhaps not if it were an empty garage or an abandoned house. “So it seems like we’re replicatin­g the same kind of confusion,” she said.

Justice Stephen Breyer said the judges have no way to decide which crimes typically or usually involve violence. “We’re just left guessing,” he said, suggesting a better approach would be “look at what the person did.”

But Deputy Solicitor General Edwin Kneedler said a home burglary poses a risk of violence. And he said the court should defer to the government on matters of immigratio­n. The law, he said, calls for a “broad delegation” of authority to executive officials.

This is the argument government lawyers made in defense of President Barack Obama’s use of executive authority to try to shield millions of immigrants from deportatio­n. It is also the argument that would call for upholding an aggressive deportatio­n policy if pursued by the Trump administra­tion.

In their legal briefs, government lawyers said a ruling in favor of Dimaya, the burglar, could have a domino effect and prompt judges to block deportatio­ns that were triggered by a host of other crimes.

Dimaya was born in the Philippine­s, but came to the United States in 1992 when he was 13 years old. He went to high school, became a lawful permanent resident and settled in Hayward, Calif.

He was convicted and imprisoned for burglarizi­ng a garage in 2007 and an empty house in 2009.

 ?? AP/FILE ?? Justice Elena Kagan said the immigratio­n law creates confusion.
AP/FILE Justice Elena Kagan said the immigratio­n law creates confusion.
 ?? AP/FILE ?? Justice Stephen Breyer said the law’s vague language leaves the court “guessing.”
AP/FILE Justice Stephen Breyer said the law’s vague language leaves the court “guessing.”

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