September 19, 2005
Bush Administration Still Sabotaging Expedited Removal Law
By Juan Mann
SOURCE W/LINKS:
http://www.vdare.com/mann/050919_nonfeasance.htm
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Michael Chertoff
recently announced that the DHS would "expand" expedited removal
authority to cover the entire Southwest border.
What Secretary Chertoff and his public relations minions forgot
to tell you: this so-called "expansion" of the summary removal
provisions of Immigration Act Section 235(b) still represents
just a small fraction of the authority expressly granted by
Congress nine years ago.
This authority has been scandalously left dormant because of an
unbroken sequence of federal government nonfeasance, uniting
both the Clinton and Bush ( 43) administrations.
The DHS’ press release trumpeted:
"The ER [expedited removal] administrative process is aimed at
reducing the number of illegal aliens from countries other than
Mexico who have spent less than 14 days in the United States and
who are apprehended within 100 miles of the border."
"’Expanding Expedited Removal gives Border Patrol agents the
ability to break the cycle of illegal migration. The use of this
authority will allow DHS the ability to gain greater control of
our borders and to protect our country against the terrorist
threat,’ stated Secretary Chertoff. ‘The Expedited Removal
process will rapidly return illegal aliens in the United States
to their country of origin while giving those seeking protection
the judicial process to pursue their claim before an immigration
judge.’”
Oh yeah?
I have been writing about the expedited removal process of
Immigration Act Section 235(b) even before my first article was
published on VDARE.com.
I’m a big fan of expedited removal as an immigration law
enforcement tool because it actually physically deports illegal
aliens who have no business being in the United States.
It also keeps border-jumpers and visa over-stayers AWAY from the
permanent amnesty candy store of immigration benefits that is
the Immigration Court system in the Department of Justice’s
Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR).
Thousands of Border Patrol agents and Immigration Inspectors
across the country are perfectly capable of determining whether
or not an alien has valid immigration status in the United
States.
But for about nine years now, they have been prevented from
doing their jobs: to summarily remove illegal aliens to the
fullest extent of the law – Immigration Act Section 235(b), that
is.
The current Section 235(b) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act was passed by Congress along with amendments called the
"Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of
1996" (IIRIRA). The IIRIRA legislation was signed by President
Clinton on September 30, 1996. It became effective on April 1,
1997.
The legislation allowed for the summary removal of illegal
aliens found anywhere in the United Stateswithin two years of
entering illegally.(It’s all there in Immigration Act Section
235(b)(1)(A)(iii).)
And, contrary to the DHS press release, applying expedited
removal to "illegal aliens from countries other than Mexico,"
Section 235(b) as passed by Congress makes no such exemption.
In other words, the Bush Administration still isn’t fully
implementing the law.
Immediately after passage, the Clinton Administration, through
then-INS Commissioner Doris Meissner, and subsequently the Bush
Administration, shamelessly mothballed most of Section 235(b).
The Section 235(b) authority was only put into effect for
immigration inspectors at ports of entry, not for any
immigration officers in the interior of the country or outside
of airport buildings.
Five years later, in November, 2002, Attorney General John
Ashcroft announced regulations to cover illegal aliens arriving
in the United States"at sea" under Section 235(b). I applauded.
Then, on August 11, 2004, the DHS announced regulations allowing
the Border Patrol to summarily remove illegal aliens found
within 100 miles of a land border…if discovered within two weeks
of their illegal entry. The game of "pass the border and you’re
home" with illegal aliens had gotten harder, but it continued.
This was still a very limited implementation of the authority
previously granted by Congress. Remember that the federal
executive agencies have the authority to summarily remove aliens
found anywhere in the United States within two years of
entering illegally!
Back in November, 2002, I asked the question –
"So why hasn’t the Attorney General [now the DHS Secretary]
applied section 235(b)(1)(A)(iii) of the Act to as many illegal
aliens as possible, and put section 235(b) to work doing what
Congress intended it to do? Lack of political will? Lack of
personnel? Inertia?"
Answer: all of the above.
The federal government’s nonfeasance in the face of the ongoing
illegal alien invasion of these United States is an unreported
scandal of enormous proportions.
If Section 235(b) would have been fully implemented as Congress
intended, the INS could have stopped Beltway Sniper Malvo
instead of dutifully releasing him to the streets to kill
Americans while supposedly waiting for his turn at an EOIR
Immigration Court hearing.
The only reason that Section 235(b) is being grudgingly
implemented as of late in tiny pieces – now nine years after the
fact – is that the Bush Administration is starting to feel
public pressure to "do something" about illegal immigration.
God bless the Minutemen!
The bottom line: summary deportation, not federal litigation is
the key to actually physically removing foreign nationals who
have no legal immigration status in this country. It’s the Holy
Grail of immigration law enforcement.
Unfortunately even Section 235(b) has its own built-in loophole
to allow illegal aliens to remain in the country and gain all of
the benefits of the EOIR Immigration Court system anyhow.
The loophole is called the " credible fear" process, where
illegal aliens can say the magic word: "asylum" – and stop the
expedited removal process in its tracks.
The EOIR’s own statistics prove that the "credible
fear"interview process is literally nothing but a DHS Get Out Of
Jail Free card. A ludicrous 93 to 99 percent of all aliens
claiming a "credible fear" were granted the chance to avoid
summary removal, get released from immigration custody to simply
disappear, or remain in the United States for years of EOIR
Immigration Court hearings and federal court appeals.
So keep your eyes peeled for more DHS deceptions and half-truths
about expedited removal. There’s sure to be more to come.
Juan Mann webmaster@deportaliens.com is a lawyer and the
proprietor of
HTTP://WWW.DeportAliens.com
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