ACLU Argues in Federal Court Today That Prolonged Indefinite Detention of Immigrants Is Illegal (1/7/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org; (212) 549-2666
PASADENA,
CA – In a federal appellate court in
California today, the American
Civil Liberties Union is arguing that the government is violating the law and
the court’s prior rulings by incarcerating immigrants in detention centers for
prolonged and indefinite periods of time while they fight their immigration
cases.
In November 2006, the
ACLU of Southern California, the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project and the
Stanford Law School Immigrants’ Rights Clinic filed lawsuits in federal district
court on behalf of four immigrant men who were being held indefinitely in the
Terminal
Island Federal
Detention
Center in San
Pedro, California, while they
pursued legitimate legal challenges to their pending deportations. All four had been detained for prolonged
periods of time and yet had never received a bond hearing to determine if their
detentions were justified. Shortly
after the lawsuits were filed, the district court ordered the government to
provide the men with bond hearings. By February 2007, all four were released.
The government appealed
the district court’s decision in three of the four prolonged detention
cases. Two of these cases -
involving the Reverend Raymond Soeoth and Amadou Lamine Diouf – are being argued
before the court today. In addition, two separate cases of immigrants Luis
Felipe Casas-Castrillon and Manuel Prieto-Romero are being argued today.
Casas-Castrillo and Prieto-Romero have been illegally detained for six and three
years respectively. The ACLU filed friend-of-the-court briefs in the those two
cases which are being argued today by attorneys from the Federal Defenders
Office of San Diego and the Northwest Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project in
Washington.
“Locking people up for
years without bond hearings is un-American,” said Ahilan Arulanantham, an
attorney with the ACLU of Southern California arguing today on behalf of Diouf
and Soeoth. “The constitutional guarantee of due process applies to all persons
in this country, not just to
U.S. citizens.
The government does not have unfettered authority to imprison people – without
hearings – for as long as it takes to determine their cases.”
Diouf, one of the
released detainees, initially came to the United
States when he was 21 years old to study
information systems at California
State
University, Northridge. After he
graduated, he overstayed his student visa because he became involved with, and
subsequently married, his present wife. Although he is eligible to become a
lawful permanent resident based on his marriage to a
U.S. citizen,
the government detained him after his former immigration attorney failed to file
important legal papers on time. His attorney acknowledged his error, but the
government refused to release Diouf or to provide him with a bond hearing while
he fought his case. Diouf had been incarcerated for almost two years before he
was finally provided with a bond hearing before an immigration judge who ordered
his release.
“I was separated from my
wife and career for almost two years because of an innocent mistake in the
filing of my immigration papers,” said Diouf. “I'm not a danger to society. All
I want is to be with my wife and get a job.”
Soeoth, the other
released detainee whose case is being argued today, is a Christian who fled
Indonesia with
his wife in 1999 to escape persecution for practicing his faith. He was
initially allowed to work in the United
States while applying for asylum and eventually
became the assistant minister for a church. However, when his asylum application
was denied in 2004, the government arrested him at his home and took him into
detention.
For the next two and a
half years the government refused to consider his release, even though he filed
a motion to reopen his asylum case on the grounds that his new role as a pastor
placed him at increased risk of persecution in Indonesia, and even though the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals stopped his deportation to allow him to pursue
his case. Soeoth was imprisoned for two and a half years before he was finally
ordered released on bond by an immigration judge last February.
"This has been very hard
for my wife and for my parish," said Soeoth. “I can't understand why in
America I must
choose between two evils: going back to
Indonesia to
face persecution or being detained while I fight for asylum.”
Although neither Diouf
nor Soeoth is a danger to society or a flight risk, the government claims they
never should have been released on bond and should go back into detention until
their cases are decided, regardless of how long this may take.
“The government's
detention policy is not only unlawful and inhumane; it is also irrational," said
Judy Rabinovitz, senior staff counsel with the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project,
who is also arguing before the court today. "The government is spending millions
of dollars locking up people whose detention serves no purpose. These
individuals are ready to comply with conditions of supervision and even
electronic monitoring if necessary. There is no reason for them to be locked up
for years while their cases make their way through the courts.”
Over the past few years,
the ACLU has filed multiple lawsuits on behalf of individual immigrants who have
been held for prolonged periods of time while fighting their immigration cases,
winning the release of more than a dozen individuals who were being unlawfully
detained.
Today’s cases are being
argued in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Lawyers on the case
include Rabinovitz and Cecillia D. Wang of the ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project,
Arulanantham and Ranjana Natarajan of the ACLU of Southern California, and
Jayashri Srikantiah of the Stanford Law School Immigrants' Rights Clinic.
More information on the
lawsuits, Soeoth v. Mukasey, Mukasey v. Diouf, Casas-Castrillon
v. Lockyer, and Prieto-Romero v. Clark is available online at: www.aclu.org/immigrants/detention/33519res20071029.html
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