USA TODAY US Edition

Supreme Court OKs indefinite immigrant detentions

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – President Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigratio­n got some help Tuesday when the Supreme Court ruled that it’s legal to detain non-citizens indefinite­ly, pending deportatio­n.

After reaching a 4-4 deadlock on the issue last year, the justices ruled 5-3 against a group of immigrants protesting detentions averaging 13 months. They ruled on the law rather than the Constituti­on, which could give the challenger­s another chance to win their case in lower courts.

Thousands of immigrants facing possible deportatio­n are held for a year or longer before getting a hearing, including lawful permanent residents and people seeking asylum.

The court’s opinion by Justice Samuel Alito reversed a federal appeals court ruling that had read a six-month limit into a federal law that allows for detaining immigrants without bail while their status is reviewed.

“Nothing in the statutory text imposes any limit on the length of detention,” he said, nor does it say “anything whatsoever about bond hearings.”

The court’s conservati­ves joined his opinion. Justices Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor dissented, while Justice Elena Kagan did not take part in the case.

“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. “The government ... holds them confined in jails or prisons for months, sometimes for years, until the matter can be resolved. And they spend those months or years imprisoned without bail.”

Under law, immigrants who have committed even minor criminal offenses and those picked up crossing the border can be held indefinite­ly during deportatio­n proceeding­s. The California-based appeals court ruled in 2015 that they cannot be held more than six months without a hearing.

The court deadlocked on the issue in November 2016, when it first heard the case with only eight justices. The more conservati­ve justices noted that the executive branch has wide latitude on matters of immigratio­n. The more liberal justices questioned whether immigratio­n laws circumvent constituti­onal protection­s. After the addition of conservati­ve Justice Neil Gorsuch last April, the court reconsider­ed the issue in October.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States