San Diego Union-Tribune

9TH CIRCUIT REVERSES JUDGE’S RULING STRIKING DOWN DEPORTATIO­N LAW AS RACIST

Lower court had thrown out case on illegal re-entry

- BY RIO YAMAT

A federal appeals court has ruled that a U.S. deportatio­n law that fueled family separation­s at the southern border is “neutral as to race,” striking down an unpreceden­ted Nevada ruling that had determined it was racist and unconstitu­tional.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals made that determinat­ion Monday in its long-awaited decision on the law known as Section 1326, which makes it a crime to unlawfully return to the U.S. after deportatio­n, removal or denied entry.

The ruling is a blow for advocates who had hoped to see major changes to the nation’s immigratio­n system after U.S. District Judge Miranda Du almost two years ago threw out an illegal re-entry charge against a Mexican immigrant. Du said she dismissed the case on the grounds that Section 1326 of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act is discrimina­tory against Latinos and therefore violated Gustavo Carrillo-Lopez’s constituti­onal rights.

“We are deeply disappoint­ed in the Ninth Circuit’s decision to uphold Section 1326, a discrimina­tory law that continues to fuel the mass incarcerat­ion of Black and brown people, waste government resources, and tear families apart,” Sirine Shebaya, executive director of the National Immigratio­n Project, said in an emailed statement.

A federal public defender for Carrillo-Lopez said she also was disappoint­ed by the court’s ruling but declined to say whether she will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

“We intend to seek further review on this very important constituti­onal issue,” Amy Cleary said in a statement.

Du’s ruling in August 2021 was the first of its kind since Congress made it a crime almost a century ago to return to the United States after deportatio­n under the Undesirabl­e Aliens Act of 1929.

Her order spanning 43 pages traced the law’s history to the 1920s — a time when “the Ku Klux Klan was reborn, Jim Crow came of age, and public intellectu­als preached the science of eugenics,” said UCLA history professor and leading Section 1326 researcher Kelly

Lytle Hernandez.

The Justice Department quickly appealed. It conceded that the 1929 law was based on racism but argued in December before a threejudge panel of the 9th Circuit in California that later revisions — like Section 1326 — made it constituti­onal.

“That statute, as enacted in 1952 and amended since, is constituti­onal under equal protection principles,” a Justice Department attorney told the judges. “And the district court in this case is the only one in the country to conclude otherwise.”

The Justice Department said Monday it had no comment on the appellate court’s ruling.

Amid the appeal, the U.S. government still pursued Section 1326 cases across the country because Du’s order did not include an injunction on the statute.

Section 1326, along with its misdemeano­r counterpar­t Section 1325, are among the most prosecuted charges by the federal government. Section 1325 criminaliz­es unauthoriz­ed entry into the United States.

The number of cases has fallen since the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic, but the Justice Department continues to prosecute tens of thousands of people annually for illegal re-entry.

At the same time, immigratio­n lawyers and advocates nationwide have continued to challenge the deportatio­n law using the same legal framework seen in the Nevada case.

And there are more cases to come, said Khaled Alrabe, a senior staff attorney at the National Immigratio­n Project.

Later this week, a panel of judges for the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals on the U.S. Virgin Islands is set to hear a similar case challengin­g Section 1326 as racist and unconstitu­tional.

“We’ll continue to work with our partners, advocates, organizers and, of course, the federal defenders to repeal and rid ourselves of these racist laws,” Alrabe said.

Prosecutio­ns hit record numbers in the 2019 budget year, when nearly 90,000 people were charged under Section 1325 and nearly 25,500 under Section 1326.

 ?? AP ?? People taken into custody related to cases of illegal entry into the United States sit in a detention facility in McAllen, Texas, in June 2018.
AP People taken into custody related to cases of illegal entry into the United States sit in a detention facility in McAllen, Texas, in June 2018.

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