Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Judge frees Palestinia­n man from 2-year immigratio­n hold

- By David Pitt

DES MOINES, Iowa — A Palestinia­n man who was jailed in Iowa for two years while immigratio­n authoritie­s tried to secure permission to deport him has been released after a federal judge ruled he had been held for too long without a reasonable expectatio­n of being repatriate­d soon.

Advocates for immigrants’ rights say Hasan Salama Dibai Ghithan’s case is not unusual and that far too many immigrants awaiting deportatio­n are jailed indefinite­ly because they don’t know how to navigate the U.S. legal system.

“I haven’t seen the sun in two years,” Ghithan told The Associated Press on Friday, just hours after his release from the Pottawatta­mie County Jail. “Man, it was just a nightmare. A nightmare. I’m glad it’s kind of over now.”

Ghithan, 33, was trying to renew his expired green card in Omaha, Neb., in January 2017, when U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents discovered he had been convicted on a drug charge in Texas a year earlier. They locked him up in Council Bluffs, Iowa.

Months passed as Ghithan sought his release or deportatio­n to a part of the world he hasn’t visited in 14 years. He became so desperate in jail that he even offered to pay for his own flight.

Complicati­ng his departure, Ghithan can’t be flown direct to his homeland because the U.S. doesn’t recognize Palestine as a sovereign, independen­t state. Immigratio­n officials said they must first obtain permission from Israel, transport him to Jordan and get him permission to cross the Allenby Bridge from Jordan into the West Bank, although Jordan rescinded a memorandum of understand­ing that allowed such crossings in September. Thus, the U.S. government has been unable to get the required permission­s.

A report by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t indicates a sharp increase in the arrest and deportatio­n of immigrants who have broken U.S. laws.

More than 396,000 people were booked into ICE detention facilities during the fiscal year that ended in September, an increase of 22.5 percent from the previous year. More than 250,000 immigrants were deported, and more than half of them were convicted of a crime.

Ghithan was born in Ramallah in the West Bank and arrived in the U.S. on a student visa in 2005. He married an American woman and received a green card, but allowed it to expire in 2012.

He went to college in Texas where, Ghithan says, friends led him astray. He was convicted on a gambling-related charge in Waco in June 2013, and possession of drug parapherna­lia in May 2016. He was released on probation and given a deferred judgment.

He then separated from his wife and moved to Omaha to live with his uncle and cousins.

It was there, as he sought to renew his green card in early 2017, that ICE officials uncovered his criminal record and jailed him in Iowa.

Ghithan was told he would see a judge within two weeks, and he expected to post bail and be released. But it was two months before a judge considered his case, and that judge denied him bail because his crime was drug related.

Meanwhile, an Omaha immigratio­n judge rejected Ghithan’s request for asylum based on his claim that he was fleeing violence in the Middle East. The judge ordered him to be deported to Israel, but nothing happened.

After calling the American Bar Associatio­n from jail, he challenged the constituti­onality of his imprisonme­nt but mistakenly filed the document in Omaha because he thought he was being held in Nebraska. Four months passed before a judge wrote to him, telling him that because he was in Iowa, he needed to file in federal court in that state.

He filed another petition in September 2018. After months of exchanges between U.S. District Judge Robert Pratt in Des Moines and federal officials, it became clear Ghithan’s release was not imminent.

On Dec. 10, federal officials suggested holding Ghithan until at least March to give them time to get the paperwork in order.

Ghithan’s court-appointed attorney, Kevin Hobbs, argued that Ghithan’s indefinite detention was “in violation of due process under the United States Constituti­on.”

Pratt granted Ghithan’s release under supervisio­n of immigratio­n authoritie­s Jan. 2.

The government filed documents Friday confirming his release.

 ?? SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT ?? ICE officials jailed Hasan Salama Dibai Ghithan in Iowa. He was freed Friday.
SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT ICE officials jailed Hasan Salama Dibai Ghithan in Iowa. He was freed Friday.

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