Montreal Gazette

U.S. judge opens door for asylum applicants

- Gene JoHnson

SEATTLE• A federal judge in Seattle opened the door Thursday for thousands of immigrants to apply for asylum, finding that the Department of Homeland Security has routinely failed to notify them of a deadline for filing their applicatio­ns.

U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez issued the ruling in a class-action lawsuit brought by immigrant rights groups on behalf of those who fear persecutio­n if returned to their home country.

In many cases, those asylum seekers are released from custody after officials have interviewe­d them and determined their fears to be credible. They’re told that they’ll need to appear in immigratio­n court, but they typically aren’t directly told that they only have a year to apply for asylum.

Due to a backlog in immigratio­n cases, the asylum seekers are not given a hearing within a year, and thus, by the time they show up in court and learn about the deadline, it’s already passed, Martinez found.

“This means many asylum seekers who were previously going to have a door slammed in their face are now able to say, ‘No, a federal court has said that I am timely filing my applicatio­n and you need to accept it,”’ said Matt Adams, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project and an attorney for the plaintiffs.

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, part of Homeland Security, did not immediatel­y return an email seeking comment.

The judge ordered the department to begin providing notice about the one-year deadline within 90 days any time an immigrant seeking asylum is released from custody pending deportatio­n proceeding­s. He also said the department must give those who missed the deadline another year to file their applicatio­ns.

Further, Martinez told the department it must fix another catch-22 in its system: that while asylum-seekers must file their asylum applicatio­ns within a year, the government refuses to accept the applicatio­ns unless the applicant has been given a formal notice to appear in immigratio­n court.

Often those notices aren’t issued within a year, so even if asylum seekers know about the one-year deadline, there’s virtually no way for them to meet it, Martinez said.

He ordered the government to come up with a uniform system for accepting asylum applicatio­ns.

“Defendants have left class members without an adequate mechanism to timely file their asylum applicatio­ns, thereby denying them the opportunit­y to exercise their statutory right to apply for asylum,” Martinez wrote.

Government lawyers argued that they do publish some materials that inform asylum seekers of the deadline and that federal law does not require that officials directly notify asylum seekers of the deadline upon their release from custody. The judge disagreed on the latter point and said the former wasn’t good enough.

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