http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050113/D87IU5KG4.html

Court Limits Detention for Immigrants
Jan 12, 9:54 PM (ET)
By HOPE YEN

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that the
government may not indefinitely detain criminals who are illegal
immigrants, undercutting a Bush administration policy applied to
foreigners deemed too dangerous to be freed.

In a separate ruling, the justices said the United States can deport
immigrants without first getting permission from the receiving
country. The 5-4 ruling will hasten the return of thousands of
Somalis who have resisted going back to their war-torn homeland.

The detention case involved two men who were part of the 1980 Mariel
exodus, in which Cuban President Fidel Castro sent criminals and
psychiatric patients to the United States along with thousands of
other fleeing Cubans.

The high court ruled in 2001 that it would be unconstitutional to
detain legal immigrants who have served time for crimes for more than
a "reasonable period," generally six months. That also should cover
illegal immigrants, the Supreme Court said in a 7-2 ruling Wednesday.

"The government fears that the security of our borders will be
compromised if it must release into the country inadmissible aliens
who cannot be removed. If that is so, Congress can attend to it,"
Justice Antonin Scalia wrote.

The administration had argued for wide discretion in holding
foreigners, particularly after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

"It's a great victory," said Judith Rabinowitz, a senior lawyer for
ACLU's Immigration Rights Project, which filed a brief supporting the
immigrants. "It's a clear rejection of what we see as the Bush
administration overreaching."

Justice Clarence Thomas and Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist
dissented. They argued that the government should have greater
authority to detain illegal immigrants for national security reasons.

Daniel Benitez was in prison in Florida for armed robbery, burglary
and battery. Sergio Martinez was convicted of theft and assault in
Rhode Island.

They finished their sentences in late 2001, but have been in U.S.
immigration custody since then, under a 1996 law that tightened
restrictions on criminal aliens. The law allows extended detention
for people facing deportation, if the attorney general believes they
are dangerous.

Government records show that about 2,269 illegal immigrants are in
prison. More than half of them, including 920 Cubans from the Mariel
boatlift, have been held longer than six months. The ruling means
those detainees now must be released.

Richard Samp, a lawyer for the conservative Washington Legal
Foundation, which filed a brief supporting the government, said the
decision "leaves the federal government without power to prevent a
foreign country from dumping all of its undesirable citizens on our
shores."

The case is Clark v. Martinez, 03-878, and Benitez v. Rozos, 03-7434.

In the other ruling, the court said the United States does not need
the consent of a foreign country before deporting an immigrant to
that country.

More than 8,000 Somalis being held in the United States are subject
to deportation or are awaiting hearings.

At issue was whether a president is authorized to deport legal
immigrants even when the receiving country has not agreed to take
them because it lacks a functioning government.

Scalia wrote that Congress had intended that these immigrants could
be deported without a country's permission even though federal law
does not specifically say that.

If the Somali immigrants fear harm at home, they have other remedies
for relief, including applying for asylum, Scalia wrote. He was
joined in the ruling by Rehnquist and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor,
Anthony Kennedy and Clarence Thomas.

Justices David Souter, John Paul Stevens, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and
Justice Stephen Breyer dissented, saying the statute allows the
Somalis to stay.

"We are disappointed," said Susan Benesch, a lawyer for Amnesty
International, which filed a brief supporting the Somalis. "The
United States has an obligation not to send people to countries where
their human rights are likely to be violated."

The case is Jama v. INS, 03-674.

---

On the Net:

The opinion in Clark v. Martinez is available at:

http://wid.ap.org/documents/scotus/050112clark.pdf

The opinion in Jama v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is
available at:

http://wid.ap.org/documents/scotus/050112jama.pdf




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