Archive for the ‘Deportation & Removal’ Category

Sixth Circuit on “serious nonpolitical crime”

Friday, June 4th, 2010

“Although the government acknowledged at oral argument that not all rock throwing amounts to a “serious nonpolitical crime,” the Board’s fleeting assessment of Berhane’s situation offers little explanation for why he falls on the wrong side of the rock-throwing line. And although the Board’s definition of a “serious nonpolitical crime” is well established (whether the criminal nature of the conduct outweighs its political motives), the Board and the courts of appeals have not issued any decisions (to our knowledge) in which rock throwing was the principal criminal act. For these reasons and those elaborated below, we vacate the Board’s decision and remand the matter to the Board for further consideration and further explanation of its position.” Berhane v. Holder, June 4, 2010.

Obama’s Aunt Zeituni Onyango Granted Asylum

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

President Obama’s African aunt has been granted asylum to stay in the United States, the Associated Press reports.

Zeituni Onyango, the half-sister of Mr. Obama’s late father, moved from Kenya to the United States in 2000. She first applied for asylum in 2002, citing violence in Kenya, according to the AP. Onyango’s request was rejected in 2004, but she stayed in the country, living in public housing in Boston.

When it was reported in 2008 that Onyango was possibly in the country illegally, Mr. Obama said he had no knowledge of her status.

Onyango testified on her own behalf in U.S. Immigration Court in Boston earlier this year. Her attorney’s announced that she was granted asylum in Cleveland today, the AP reports.

2d Circuit – Ineffective lawyering compels reversal of immigrant’s illegal return conviction

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

“Second Circuit Judge Robert Katzmann has again advanced the cause of effective assistance of counsel in deportation proceedings. Cerna v. United States is the second swallow this spring from federal courts. Just four weeks earlier Justice John Paul Stevens in a 7-2 decision, citing a lawyer’s neglect, reversed a criminal conviction, emphasizing the “severity of deportation”—“the equivalent of banishment or exile”. Padilla v. United States (March 31 2010).”

Iraq war veteran may be denied citizenship

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

“Ekaterine Bautista served honorably for six years and earned a Combat Action Badge, but she used a relative’s name. She fears deportation.” LA Times, Apr. 26, 2010.

Actress arrested, marriage fraud charged

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

“Maria Fernanda Romero Martinez has appeared in numerous Spanish-language movies and soap operas. But now, federal authorities claim she was at the center of a real-life drama that has landed her and a Los Angeles man in court. Romero and Kent Ross, both 28, were arrested Friday morning at their respective Los Angeles homes, according to a federal affidavit. They were charged with marriage fraud for allegedly trying to gain legal residency and a work permit for her by marrying each other.” LA Times, Apr. 17, 2010.

Non-Citizen U.S. War Vets Facing Deportation Despite Military Promises of Citizenship

Monday, April 5th, 2010

“We take a look at the threat of deportation that non-citizen veterans of American wars continue to face despite US military promises of citizenship. We talk to Rohan Coombs, a Jamaican-born U.S. vet who was in the US marine corps for six years and served in the Persian Gulf War. He spent eight months in prison for a marijuana-related conviction. The day he was to be released he was told he would be deported.

ICE retracts “quota” memo

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

“Significant portions of the memo cited in The Washington Post (3/27/10 – Becker/Hsu) did not reflect our policies, was sent without my authorization, and has since been withdrawn and corrected. We are strongly committed to carrying out our priorities to remove serious criminal offenders first and we definitively do not set quotas.” – Assistant Secretary John Morton, Mar. 27, 2010.

 Here is the original Washington Post

ICE officials set quotas to deport more illegal immigrants

By Spencer S. Hsu and Andrew Becker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, March 27, 2010; A04

 

Seeking to reverse a steep drop in deportations, U.S. immigration authorities have set controversial new quotas for agents. At the same time, officials have stepped back from an Obama administration commitment to focus enforcement efforts primarily on illegal immigrants who are dangerous or have violent criminal backgrounds.

The moves, outlined in internal documents and a recent e-mail by a senior U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement official to field directors nationwide, differ from pledges by ICE chief John T. Morton and his boss, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, to focus enforcement on the most dangerous illegal immigrants. That approach represented a break from the mass factory raids and neighborhood sweeps the Bush administration used to drive up arrests.

In a Feb. 22 memo, James M. Chaparro, head of ICE detention and removal operations, wrote that, despite record deportations of criminals, the overall number of removals was down. While ICE was on pace to achieve “the Agency goal of 150,000 criminal alien removals” for the year ending Sept. 30, total deportations were set to barely top 310,000, “well under the Agency’s goal of 400,000,” and nearly 20 percent behind last year’s total of 387,000, he wrote.

Beyond stating ICE enforcement goals in unusually explicit terms, Chaparro laid out how the agency would pump up the numbers: by increasing detention space to hold more illegal immigrants while they await deportation proceedings; by sweeping prisons and jails to find more candidates for deportation and offering early release to those willing to go quickly; and, most controversially, with a “surge” in efforts to catch illegal immigrants whose only violation was lying on immigration or visa applications or reentering the United States after being deported.

“These efforts must be sustained and will be closely monitored,” Chaparro told field directors in the e-mail, which was obtained by the Center for Investigative Reporting and The Washington Post.

ICE spokesman Brian P. Hale distanced the agency from Chaparro’s remarks, saying, “Portions of the memo were inconsistent with ICE, inconsistent with the administration’s point of view and inconsistent with the secretary.” He added that the agency has moved to “clarify” the situation.

Chaparro issued a new memo Friday stating that his earlier e-mail “signals no shift in the important steps we have taken to date to focus our priorities on the smart and effective enforcement of immigration laws, prioritizing dangerous criminal aliens . . . while also adhering to Congressional mandates to maintain an average daily [detention] population and meet annual performance measures.”

In the new memo, Chaparro did not alter or rescind any of the strategies he had laid out.

An immigration official said deportations are falling mainly because the focus on criminals has added a complication: It takes an average of 45 days to deport criminals, compared with 11 days for non-criminals, creating a shortage of detention beds. The number of beds was also limited because costs were higher than Congress expected, the official said.

Deportations of convicted criminals climbed 19 percent in 2009 and are on pace to climb 40 percent this year, while deportations of non-criminal illegal immigrants fell 3 percent and are on pace to drop 33 percent this year, agency officials said.

Advocates on the right and left pounced on the memo and other ICE documents, saying they showed that the agency is being neither tough nor consistent in targeting the worst offenders.

“We cannot allow a preoccupation with criminal aliens to obscure other critical ICE missions,” Rep. Harold Rogers (Ky.), the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations subcommittee for homeland security, said in a statement released by his office. “At best, it appears as though immigration enforcement is being shelved and the Administration is attempting to enact some sort of selective amnesty under the cover of ‘prioritization.’ ”

Joan Friedland, immigration policy director at the National Immigration Law Center, countered that quotas will encourage agents to target easy cases, not the ones who pose the greatest safety risk.

“For ICE leadership, it’s not about keeping the community safe. It’s all about chasing this 400,000 number,” said Chris Crane, spokesman for the American Federation of Government Employees Council 118, which represents ICE workers.

Since November, ICE field offices in Northern California, Dallas and Chicago have issued new evaluation standards and work plans for enforcement agents who remove illegal immigrants from jails and prisons. In some cases, for example, the field offices are requiring that agents process an average of 40 to 60 cases a month to earn “excellent” ratings.

Such standards present a problem, said one San Francisco area agent who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid reprisal. Instead of taking a day to prepare a case against a legal resident with multiple convictions for serious crimes, agents may choose to process a drunk driver or nonviolent offender who agrees to leave the country voluntarily, because it will take only hours.

The steps appear at odds with a statement made by Morton in August, when he told reporters ICE had ended quotas in a program to capture illegal immigrants violating court deportation orders.

“I just don’t think that a law enforcement program should be based on a hard number that must be met,” Morton said. “So we don’t have quotas anymore.”

Under the Bush administration, ICE officials in 2006 increased an annual quota from 125 to 1,000 arrests for each fugitive operations team. At the same time, the agency dropped its policy that agents focus on criminals and deportation violators.

Becker is a staff reporter for the nonprofit Center for Investigative Reporting in Berkeley, Calif.

Minor Drug Cases, Major Trouble for Immigrants

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

“When a police officer in this Long Island suburb found a marijuana cigarette in Jerry Lemaine’s pocket one night in January 2007, a Legal Aid lawyer counseled him to plead guilty. Under state statutes, the penalty was only a $100 fine, and though Mr. Lemaine had been caught with a small amount of marijuana years earlier as a teenager, that case had been dismissed. But Mr. Lemaine, a legal permanent resident, soon discovered that his quick guilty plea had dire consequences. Immigration authorities flew him in shackles to Texas, where he spent three years behind bars, including 10 months in solitary confinement, as he fought deportation to Haiti, the country he had left at age 3.” Nina Bernstein, NYT, Mar. 30, 2010.

Padilla v. Kentucky obligations for criminal defense attorneys

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Padilla v. Kentucky, 7-2
“We granted certiorari, 555 U. S. ___ (2009), to decide whether, as a matter of federal law, Padilla’s counsel had an obligation to advise him that the offense to which he was pleading guilty would result in his removal from this country. We agree with Padilla that constitutionally competent counsel would have advised him that his conviction for drug distribution made him subject to automatic deportation. Whether he is entitled to relief depends on whether he has been prejudiced, a matter that we do not address.”

TRAC Issues Report on Criminal Immigration Prosecutions

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

The Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) issued a report on trends in criminal immigration prosecutions. The report finds that the rate of reported prosecutions during the first three months of FY 2010 decreased by 8.8% compared to 2009 quarterly figures.

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