The Mercury News

Supreme Court throws out bond-hearing ruling

- By Robert Barnes

The Supreme Court on Tuesday said immigrants held by the government and facing deportatio­n are not entitled to a bond hearing even after months or years of detention.

The decision, which had resulted in a deadlock before Justice Neil Gorsuch joined the court, has taken on added importance with President Donald Trump’s order of a crackdown on immigratio­n violations.

In a splintered 5-3 decision, the court’s conservati­ves said the relevant statute does not even “hint,” as Justice Samuel Alito, wrote, at the broad reading of the right to bail hearings adopted by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.

That court had ruled that an immigrant held in detention must be given a bond hearing every six months and that detention beyond the initial six-month period is permitted only if the government proved that further detention is justified.

Alito rejected that standard and said the more natural reading of the law at stake is that it authorizes detention“untilthe end of the applicable procedure ,” and that“there is no justificat­ion for any of the procedural requiremen­ts” that the appeals court added.

The ruling brought an impassione­d dissent from Justice Stephen Breyer, who underscore­d his dissatisfa­ction by reading part of it from the bench.

“The many thousands of individual­s involved in this case are persons who believe they have a right to enter into or remain in the United States, and a sizable number turn out to be right,” Breyer said.

But he said some of them remain in detention for years because the government reads the statute as “denying them the bail hearings that the law makes available even for those accused of serious crimes.” He was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor.

Alito called the dissent an “utterly implausibl­e” reading of the statute.

The six-month deadline that the 9th Circuit applied to a wide range of immigrants, from people detained after entering the United States for the first time to longtime legal residents.

The case was brought by Alejandro Rodriguez, a lawful permanent resident who came to the country as an infant. The Department of Homeland Security started removal proceeding­s because of a conviction for drug possession and an earlier conviction for joyriding.

Rodriguez, who was working as a dental assistant, was held for three years before he challenged his confinemen­t. The average detention for the others who joined his lawsuit was 13 months.

At oral argument, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, representi­ng a group of noncitizen­s held for more than a year without a hearing, told the Supreme Court that the outcome of the case will affect thousands of people held in detention centers.

The case took on heightened significan­ce as Trump has vowed to broadly increase immigratio­n enforcemen­t across the United States. Immigratio­n arrests are up sharply since he took office in January, but deportatio­ns are down this year, in part because of a significan­t drop in illegal crossings on the southern border with Mexico.

Tuesday’s decision returns the case to the lower courts for further action, including an examinatio­n of whether the detainees have a constituti­onal right to a bail hearing.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCITED PRESS ?? The Supreme Court voted 5-3 that immigrants facing deportatio­n aren’t entitled to a bond hearing after months or years of detention.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCITED PRESS The Supreme Court voted 5-3 that immigrants facing deportatio­n aren’t entitled to a bond hearing after months or years of detention.

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