Supreme Court will decide if ‘criminal aliens’ can be held indefinitely while they fight deportation
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ The Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear a Trump administration appeal and decide if βcriminal aliensβ may be held indefinitely while they fight deportation.
The case to be heard in the fall could give the administration more power to arrest and hold immigrants, including green card holders, who have criminal records.
The governmentβs lawyers say immigration laws call for deporting non-citizens with βaggravated feloniesβ on their records. And in such cases, they say these people may be held for months or even years while their claims are before the immigration courts.
Judges have been split on whether non-citizens fighting deportation have a right to a bond hearing and a chance to go free if they pose no risk to public safety.
The 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ruled for a pair of green card holders who faced deportation to the Dominican Republic and Jamaica. Both had been convicted of assaults that were characterized as aggravated felonies under the immigration laws.
However, the appeals court said their βprolonged detentionβ was unconstitutional if they were given no bond hearing and no chance to go free.
They were represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, whose lawyers urged the court to turn down the appeal.
βFor the first time in this litigation, the government argues that civil detention βdoes not implicate any fundamental rightsβ and so the Due Process Clause affords the detained men no protectionsβsubstantive or procedural,β they wrote.
In the past, they said the Supreme Court had accepted the βbedrock principleβ that detained persons may have a right to seek their release on bond.
One of the two men had left this country and returned to Jamaica, the ACLU lawyers said. But Solicitor Gen. D. John Sauer urged the court to rule on the issue.
The detained men βhave no procedural due-process right to a bond hearing on whether they are a flight risk or danger to the community,β he told the court. βIndividualized findings about flight risk and danger are irrelevantβ under the immigration laws which called for βmandatory detention based on their aggravated-felony convictions alone.β