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US Supreme Court issues anti-immigrant ruling
By Joe Anthony
26 June 2006
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On June 22, the US Supreme Court upheld in an 8-1 decision
the deportation of Humberto Fernandez-Vargas. US immigration authorities
had deported the 53-year-old Mexican citizen under the 1996 Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA),
which established that undocumented immigrants who reenter the
country after a previous deportation must be deported again, denied
all appeals or changes in immigrant status, and barred from reentry
for ten years. Vargas had entered the United States illegally
in 1982 after having been previously deported.
Vargas based his challenge to the deportation order on the
laws in place in 1982, which allowed undocumented immigrants without
criminal records to remain in the US while applying for legal
status. He argued that his summary deportation, after having lived
many years in the US, amounted to an ex-post-facto application
of the law. The sole dissenting justice, John Paul Stevens, accepted
this argument, stating that the court usually did not apply
new laws to old cases.
The vindictive nature of the ruling is underscored by the specifics
of Vargas circumstances. Following his reentry to the United
States 24 years ago, he opened a small business, maintained a
clean criminal record, married a US citizen and had a son by her.
He applied for legal status on the basis of his marriage to
a US citizen. That alerted immigration authorities, who took him
into custody and deported him to Juarez, Mexico two years ago.
His wife, Rita, has continued the legal battle on his behalf.
The eight justices who ruled against Vargas included three
of the nominal liberals. One of them, Justice David Souter, wrote
the majority opinion, arguing that Vargas was a continuous
lawbreaker who should have had ample warning
of the IIRIRA.
Justice Stevens dissenting opinion highlighted the cruelty
and dubious legality of the majority position. At the time
of his entry, and for the next 15 years, Stevens wrote,
it inured to petitioners benefit for him to remain
in the United States continuously, to build a business, and to
start a family. After April 1, 1997, the date on which the applicable
reinstatement provision became effective, all of these activities
were rendered irrelevant in the eyes of the law.
The effects on Vargas and his family have been devastating.
According to desertnews.com, Vargas said in a phone interview:
I need my family... I wish I could be with my family.
Vargas wife described her family as destroyed,
according to the web site.
Jennifer Chacon, a law professor at the University of California
at Davis, said, This concerns the people we should be the
least concerned about. They are stable people with jobs; grandparents,
parents, husbands. These people are not security threats.
The American Civil Liberties Union and several immigrant-rights
organizations had urged the Court not to apply the 1996 retroactively.
Vargas and his attorneys will continue to appeal to the Supreme
Court, as a footnote in the decision allows him to apply for a
waiver that would enable him to return to the US legally. However,
his attorneys are not optimistic, given the difficulty in obtaining
such waivers.
The IIRIRA was passed in 1996 by the Republican-controlled
Congress and signed into law by President Clinton, a Democrat.
The provision of the bill that was applied retroactively to Vargas
is only one of several draconian measures.
The bill sharply curtails judicial review of deportation cases,
and threatens deportation for permanent legal residents arrested
for petty crimes such as shoplifting or marijuana possession.
It also authorizes state and local governments to deny social
benefits to aliens.
The ruling will affect tens of thousands of undocumented immigrants
in the United States. Workers who have lived in the United States
for years will be separated from their families and friends and
deprived of their livelihoods as a result of the retroactive enforcement
of this reactionary law.
The effects of the right-wing campaign against immigrants as
well as the elevation of two Bush nominees to the high court can
be seen in the difference between last weeks ruling and
the Supreme Court decision in 2001 in a case that involved the
same law. In INS v. St. Cyr, the Court ruled that the 1996
law could not be applied retroactively to permanent legal residents
who had been charged with a crime. In the 5-4 ruling, Stevens,
arguing for the majority, wrote that a statute may not be
applied retroactively... absent a clear indication from Congress
that it intended such a result.
See Also:
Populist demagogy and immigrant-bashing
in the US: The case of Lou Dobbs
[16 June 2006]
The implications of the immigrant
demonstrations for the class struggle in America
[4 May 2006]
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