Oroville Mercury-Register

Felony deportatio­n law unconstitu­tional, rules US judge in Nevada

- By Ken Ritter

LAS VEGAS >> In a court ruling with potentiall­y broad implicatio­ns for U.S. immigratio­n cases, a federal judge in Nevada found that a criminal law that dates to 1929 and makes it a felony for a person who has been deported to return to the United States is unconstitu­tional.

U.S. District Judge Miranda Du in Reno, in an order issued Wednesday, found the law widely known as Section 1326 is based on “racist, nativist roots” and discrimina­tes against Mexican and Latinx people in violation of the equal protection clause of the Fifth Amendment.

“Anybody who works in federal courts knows the statute,” Franny Forsman, retired longtime chief of the Federal Public Defender’s Office in Nevada, said Thursday. “There really are a large number of cases that have been brought over the years under that section. They’re mostly public defender cases.”

Section 1326 of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act makes it a crime for a person to enter the U.S. if they have been denied admission, deported or removed. It was enacted in 1952 using language from the Undesirabl­e Aliens Act passed by Congress in 1929. Penalties were stiffened five times between 1988 and 1996 to increase its deterrent value.

Forsman said she expected the government will appeal to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in

San Francisco.

But Julian Castro, secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t in the Obama administra­tion, tweeted that he doubted the Justice Department would want to defend a law with “an incredibly racist history.”

Acting U.S. Attorney Christophe­r Chiou and an aide did not immediatel­y respond to messages about the ruling.

Forsman called Du’s order groundbrea­king for its thoroughne­ss. Du, a Vietnamese immigrant, was nominated to the federal bench by President Barack Obama and sworn in in 2012.

“I think it will have implicatio­ns because it’s going to be difficult to get around her reasoning,” Forsman said of the court order. “It’s a little hard to get around a statute that was called the ‘Wetback Act’ by the people enacting it.” The derogatory term often refers to Mexican migrants who have entered the country illegally, but it’s also used to disparage all Hispanics.

Du said she considered written and oral arguments and expert testimony about the legislativ­e history of the law from professors Benjamin Gonzalez O’Brien of San Diego State University and Kelly Lytle Hernández of the University of California, Los Angeles.

Carrillo-Lopez was arrested in Nevada in 2019 after having been deported in 1999 and again in 2012, according to prosecutor­s. His federal public defender,

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