The Columbus Dispatch

Justices reiterate immigrant detention

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON — A divided Supreme Court ruled Tuesday against a group of immigrants in a case about the government’s power to detain them after they’ve committed crimes but finished their sentences.

The issue in the case before the justices had to do with the detention of noncitizen­s who have committed a broad range of crimes that make them deportable. Immigratio­n law tells the government it must arrest those people when they are released from custody and then hold them 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. In the case before the Supreme Court, a group of mostly green-card holders argued that unless they’re picked up essentiall­y within a day of being released, they should be 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 were to agree, they would not have to remain in custody while their deportatio­n case goes forward. That’s the same hearing rule that applies to other noncitizen­s the government is trying to deport.

But the Supreme Court disagreed with the immigrants’ interpreta­tion of federal law in a 5-4 ruling that divided the court along ideologica­l lines. Looking at a statutory provision enacted by Congress in 1996, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that “neither the statute’s text nor its structure” supported the immigrants’ argument. The court’s conservati­ve justices sided with the

Trump administra­tion. The administra­tion argued, as the Obama administra­tion did, that those affected by the law aren’t entitled to a hearing where they can argue for their release, regardless of whether they are arrested immediatel­y after being released from custody or not.

Department of Justice spokeswoma­n Kerri Kupec said the administra­tion was “pleased with the decision.”

Justice Stephen Breyer, in a dissent he read aloud in court, said that the larger importance of the case has to do with the power his colleagues’ ruling gives the government.

“It is a power to detain persons who have committed a minor crime many years before. And it is a power to hold those persons, perhaps for many months, without any opportunit­y to obtain bail,” Breyer said.

He wrote that in his view the law requires immigrants who have committed crimes to be detained “within a reasonable time after their release” from custody, “presumptiv­ely no more than six months.” If the person is not detained within that time, they should get a hearing where they can argue for their release, Breyer wrote.

The American Civil Liberties Union represente­d the immigrants in the case before the Supreme Court. ACLU attorney Cecillia Wang, who argued the case, said after the decision that the ACLU will call on Congress to clarify the law and will continue to pursue options in court.

Wang also called the decision an “extreme waste of taxpayer money,” saying it locks up individual­s who are not a danger to the community.

The case before the justices involved a class-action lawsuit brought by noncitizen­s in California and a similar class-action lawsuit brought in the state of Washington.

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