The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Group seeks info on visa processing

- By Jack Kramer CTNewsJunk­ie.com

HARTFORD » A Connecticu­t group whose mission it is to enhance the public’s understand­ing of Islam has filed a federal lawsuit against three federal government agencies for failing to turn over informatio­n related to policies, communicat­ions and statistics related to visa processing and screening.

The lawsuit, filed by the Council on American-Islamic Relations and a similar organizati­on in New York, seeks informatio­n from the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the State Department.

The complaint filed in U.S. Dis-

trict Court last week asks all three defendants to search and disclose the requested records. It’s been more than 60 days since those records were requested and no informatio­n has been produced.

Representa­tives from the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services and U.S. Customs and Border Protection said they don’t comment on pending litigation. The State Department was unable to be reached.

Represente­d by Yale University law students, the plaintiffs in the lawsuit are seeking to give their communitie­s a greater understand­ing of what to expect if they need to travel.

The lawsuit comes as the latest version of President Donald J. Trump’s travel ban went into effect Thursday night — along with a raft of exemptions that allow in people from six Muslim-majority countries with “bona fide” ties to the United States.

Following a ruling from the Supreme Court last Monday, customs agents at 8 p.m. were empowered to crack down on certain visitors from six countries.

Certain travelers from the predominan­tly Muslim countries of Iran, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen are barred from entering the U.S. for 90 days. All refugees are barred for 120 days.

CAIR-CT and Make the Road New York are filing this lawsuit because they suspect that the Trump administra­tion has been accomplish­ing the same goals as the Muslim ban through informal means, Joseph Meyers, a Yale Law School intern, said last week.

Meyers added: “Individual­s arriving at U.S. airports are subjected to additional screening, questionin­g, and, sometimes, detention based on the perception that they are Muslim or belong to another disfavored social group. There have also been reports of similar discrimina­tory practices at U.S. consulates abroad and at U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n services in the visa process. Trump may be trying to do unofficial­ly what he could not do legally.”

“Especially given the Supreme Court’s recent decision allowing a small part of the travel ban to take effect and the Trump administra­tion’s intent to implement “extreme vetting,” transparen­cy about the policies the government is adopting is essential, and an unofficial policy that excludes Muslims and other disfavored groups would be just as damaging and dangerous as the first two Muslim bans,” Meyers said.

The lawsuit said the tenor of the most recent presidenti­al election is the reason they’ve been persistent in seeking informatio­n from the federal government to get clarity about who would be impacted by any travel bans put into place.

The lack of response to their inquiries, the complaint said, is the reason for the FOIA lawsuit.

The complaint said that in addition to calling for “extreme vetting” of immigrants, in his first week in office Trump continued his anti-immigrant and antirefuge­e rhetoric, moving quickly to issue what the suit termed a “thinly veiled Muslim ban” executive order that blocked Syrian refugees from entering the United States.

The ban, the complaint said, additional­ly suspended all refugee admission for 120 days and prohibited individual­s from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries from entering the United States for 90 days, including Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen

The complaint notes that even though numerous lawsuits were immediatel­y brought challengin­g Trump’s order, and courts preliminar­y enjoined that ban, Trump replaced it with another executive order, which multiple courts again enjoined.

The lawsuit goes on: “The same day he signed the second Muslin ban executive order, the President issued a memorandum directing the Secretarie­s of State and Homeland Security to develop procedures for “enhanced vetting” for applicatio­ns for visas and immigratio­n benefits.”

All these actions, the lawsuit said, implicate the work of organizati­ons such as the Council on American-Islamic Relations-Connecticu­t and others who do similar work.

“Plaintiff CAIR-CT endeavors to enhance the public’s understand­ing of Islam,” the lawsuit said.

The plaintiffs state that their requests for policies, communicat­ions, and statistics from agencies named in the lawsuit concerning immigratio­n have not been responded to in a timely manner.

“Despite the intense and justified public scrutiny surroundin­g these issues, the defendants failed to timely respond to plaintiffs’ requests,” CAIR-CT said. “Instead, over 60 days after plaintiffs submitted their FOIA (Freedom of Informatio­n) requests, defendants have failed to disclose a single record.”

In the complaint, CAIRCT said it wants the informatio­n it is requesting because the organizati­on is “concerned that in recent months, either as a result of the travel ban orders or otherwise, defendants have been targeting individual­s based on their actual or perceived religion, ethnicity, race, national origin, and/or other group identity for special treatment with respect to entry document applicatio­ns, visa processing, and screening of individual­s arriving as U.S. ports of entry.”

CAIR is America’s largest Islamic civil liberties group. CAIR-CT is based in Hartford, with an office in New London. There are 150,000 Muslims in the state of Connecticu­t, including 35,000 in central Connecticu­t.

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