Los Angeles Times

Supreme Court sides with government in rulings

- By David G. Savage

— The Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority sided with the government Thursday in a pair of rulings, one that limited the Freedom of Informatio­n Act and another that made it harder for immigrants to fight deportatio­n if they have minor crimes on their records.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett spoke for the court for the first time and said federal agencies are not required to release draft opinions that did not result in a final regulation.

The 7-2 decision rejected a suit by the Sierra Club seeking documents from the Fish and Wildlife Service that raised objections to a proposed regulation on cooling water intakes of power plants that was later significan­tly revised by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in 2014.

Barrett said Congress shielded agencies from releasing internal documents that were part of the “deliberati­ve process,” and that exemption covers draft opinions which are not part of the final decision.

“It is not always self-evident whether a document represents an agency’s final decision, but one thing is clear: A document is not final solely because nothing else follows it. Sometimes a proposal dies on the vine,” she wrote in U.S. Fish and Wildlife vs. Sierra Club. “That happens in deliberati­ons — some ideas are discarded or simply languish. Yet documents discussing such dead-end ideas can hardly be described as reflecting the agency’s chosen course.”

A federal judge in San Francisco and the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals had ruled for the Sierra Club and said FOIA “mandates a policy of broad disclosure” of government documents.

However, the high court said Congress exempted internal documents so agencies are not “forced to operate in a fish bowl,” Barrett said. “The deliberati­ve process privilege protects the draft biological opinions from disclosure because they are both predecisio­nal and deliberati­ve,” she said.

Justices Stephen G. Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor dissented. They said the drafts in dispute concerned a “final biological opinion” from the Fish and Wildlife Service which should be subject to release under FOIA.

In the deportatio­n case, the high court ruled that immigrants who are longtime U.S. residents and are seeking leniency in deportatio­n proceeding­s must “bear the burden” of showing that a past state crime on their record was not a federal offense of “moral turpitude” that warrants their removal.

Immigrants such as Clemente Pereida “face an uphill climb” to avoid deportatio­n, said Justice Neil M. Gorsuch for a 5-3 majority.

Pereida is a Mexican citizen who has lived and worked unlawfully in Nebraska for more than 25 years and raised three children. He was convicted in 2010 of“criminal imp er sonWASHING­TON ation” under Nebraska law for using a fake Social Security card and was fined $100. He sought leniency on the grounds that he was supporting his family.

Immigratio­n officials countered that the law did not allow for a “cancellati­on of removal” for anyone with a “crime of moral turpitude” on their record. The government won in federal courts in Nebraska and St. Louis, but the 9th Circuit Court in California is among several that have ruled for immigrants in related cases.

Brian Goldman, a lawyer who represente­d Pereida, said, “We are deeply disappoint­ed in the court’s decision, which retreats from a century’s worth of precedent on the immigratio­n consequenc­es of past criminal conviction­s.”

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