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End of Immigration and Travel Ban on Noncitizens Living with HIV/AIDS
National Immigration Project and Penn State Law Respond to Justice Department's Report on Hiring Immigration Judges (10/1/2009)
U.S. Rejects a Call for Enforceable Immigration Detention Rules (7/29/09)
President Bush restores authority to Department of Health and Human Services to determine HIV /AIDS as ground of inadmissibility (7/31/08)
Immigration Detainees and Advocacy Groups Sue Homeland Security for Comprehensive and Enforceable Immigration Detention Standards (4/30/08)

Government’s Newly-Announced Directive Will Benefit Thousands

of Immigrant Victims of Domestic Violence (4/18/08)

Immigration Detainees and the Project Petition DHS to Issue Enforceable, Comprehensive Immigration Detention Standards  (1/25/07)
 

For more information on any of the press releases or events described below, contact Associate Director Paromita Shah by e-mail or call 617-227-9727, ext. 1.

November 2, 2009

End of Immigration and Travel Ban on

Noncitizens Living with HIV/AIDS

After many years of struggle by advocates, CDC/HHS issued a final rule ending the HIV immigration and travel ban. It will take effect on January 4, 2010.

Read the FINAL RULE.

October 1, 2009

National Immigration Project and Penn State Law Respond to Justice Department's Report on Hiring  Immigration Judges

The Center for Immigrants' Rights at Penn State University, The Dickinson School of Law and the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG) released today a white paper titled "Playing Politics at the Bench: A White Paper on the Justice Department's Investigation into the Hiring Practices of Immigration Judges."

Read the full PRESS RELEASE.

Download the full REPORT.

Request a paper copy of the REPORT.

July 29, 2009

U.S. Rejects Call for Immigration Detention Rules

The Obama administration has refused to make legally enforceable rules for immigration detention, rejecting a federal court petition by former detainees and their advocates and embracing a Bush-era inspection system that relies in part on private contractors.

The decision, contained in a six-page letter received by the plaintiffs this week, disappointed and angered immigration advocacy organizations around the country. They pointed to a stream of newly available documents that underscore the government’s failure to enforce minimum standards it set in 2000, including those concerning detainees’ access to basic health care, telephones and lawyers, even as the number of people detained has soared to more than 400,000 a year.

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the immigration detention system, a conglomeration of county jails, federal centers and privately run prisons, concluded “that rule-making would be laborious, time-consuming and less flexible” than the review process now in place, Jane Holl Lute, the agency’s deputy secretary, said in the letter.

The department maintained that current inspections by the government, and a shift in 2008 to “performance-based standards” monitored by private contractors, “provide adequately for both quality control and accountability.”

The administration’s letter met a 30-day deadline set by Judge Denny Chin of Federal District Court in Manhattan. Judge Chin ruled last month that the agency’s failure to respond to the plaintiffs’ petition for two and a half years was unreasonable.

The government’s decision “disregards the plight of the hundreds of thousands of immigration detainees,” said Paromita Shah, associate director of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, one of the plaintiffs, which contends that the lack of enforceable rules is at the heart of persistent problems of mistreatment and medical neglect. “The department has demonstrated a disturbing commitment to policies that have cost dozens of lives.”

The plaintiffs had expected better from the Obama administration, said Dan Kesselbrenner, the project’s director.

But Matt Chandler, a spokesman for Homeland Security who served in the Obama campaign, put a different face on the rejection of rule-making.

“The rule-making process can take months, if not years,” he said in an e-mailed statement, “and the administration believes that reforming our immigration detention system needs to happen much faster than that.” A special adviser on detention to Janet Napolitano, the secretary of homeland security, “is engaged in a top-to-bottom review” of the detention system, he said, and will release her recommendations soon.

In a telephone interview, the adviser, Dora Schriro, said Immigration and Customs Enforcement had made changes in recent years “in an effort toward continuous improvement.”

“What’s appreciably different about this administration is the recognition that detention and alternatives to detention are disciplines, and can and will be carried out under the most professional of standards,” Dr. Schriro said.

But standards without teeth are doomed to fail, said lawyers for two other national immigration law organizations, one in Los Angeles and another in Chicago, echoing the plaintiffs’ disappointment with the rejection of enforceable rules.

Both groups recently won the release of thousands of pages of detention inspection documents that had been kept secret. They said the documents showed that the government had routinely violated its own minimum monitoring standards and ignored findings of deficiencies for years.

The “performance-based” standards the Obama administration has now embraced have no penalties and are not significantly different from what failed in the past, said Karen Tumlin, a lawyer with the National Immigration Law Center in California. On Tuesday, the center issued what it called “the first nationwide comprehensive report” on violations of detention standards, based on records from 2004 and 2005 obtained through Freedom of Information litigation.

Dozens of more recent inspection documents, some from this year, show a similar pattern, said Chuck Roth, the director of litigation for the Chicago group, Heartland Alliance’s National Immigration Justice Center. Many were posted by the government itself on the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Web site after the center won a three-year federal court battle to force their release.

“The groups that ICE commonly contracts with are staffed by former ICE employees and former corrections officers who have a vested interest in pleasing ICE,” Mr. Roth said, “so we haven’t seen them take the useful watchdog role.”

The documents include eight years of monitoring reports by the American Bar Association, which has been granted access to detention centers and detainees only on condition that its findings, shared with the government, are not made public.

Reports from two bar association visits to the Elizabeth Detention Center in Elizabeth, N.J., in January 2006 and July 2007, illustrate the weaknesses. In 2006, the team noted detainee complaints about medical neglect and threats of physical violence that were reported to guards but ignored.

A year and a half later, a return visit was cut by the center to two hours from six hours, and “inexplicably, many of the areas that the delegation had requested to visit in advance and needed to see in order to fulfill its mission were locked” and off limits.

The delegation was unaware that only two months earlier a 52-year-old tailor named Boubacar Bah had died after suffering a skull fracture in the jail and being locked in an isolation cell without treatment for more than 13 hours.

“This whole detention system that has been created is a human rights nightmare,” said Mary Meg McCarthy, executive director of the National Immigrant Justice Center. “The past administration created this, and now we need to dismantle it.”

 

July 31, 2008

President Bush restores authority to Department of Health and Human Services to determine HIV /AIDS as ground of inadmissibility.

 This week President Bush gave the final seal of approval on a five-year, $48 billion dollar extension of the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). The Tom Lantos and Henry J. Hyde United States Global Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Reauthorization Act of 2008 is a multi-billion dollar humanitarian program that funds overseas efforts to combat HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.

 In addition to enhancing U.S. humanitarian leadership abroad, the new law removes a statutory bar to immigration and travel to the United States for individuals living with HIV/AIDS. The passage of the bill is a powerful first step towards ending the more than 15 years of discrimination against HIV positive individuals.

 In 1993, Congress defined “communicable disease of public health significance” to include HIV/AIDS in the immigration statute, thereby stripping the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) of its authority to determine which medical conditions posed a threat to the public health.  HIV/AIDS was the only medical condition to be specifically listed in US immigration law as a mandatory ground of inadmissibility.

 PEPFAR restores authority to HHS to determine whether HIV positive individuals should be barred from entry to the United States. To truly eliminate the bar, HHS must remove HIV/AIDS from its definition of diseases which make individuals ineligible for admission into the United States. Until HHS modifies its regulations, people living with HIV/AIDS are still, in effect, barred from the United States.

 The National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild urges Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael Leavitt to refuse to sanction policies that foster inaccurate beliefs regarding transmission and that perpetuate the stigmatization of people living with HIV/AIDS, and to take immediate steps to remove infection with HIV from its list of communicable diseases. 

 The National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild is a national legal support organization with a long-standing commitment to protecting and defending the rights of noncitizens that face the greatest barriers to justice. For more than a decade, the National Immigration Project has been providing legal technical assistance and support to legal advocates, immigration attorneys, and case managers working with HIV positive and other noncitizens.

 

April 30, 2008

immigration detainees and advocacy groups

SUE HOMELAND SECURITY FOR COMPREHENSIVE AND ENFORCEABLE IMMIGRATION DETENTION STANDARDS

Widespread and systematic abuses in immigration detention persist due to lack of regulations

New york, ny – Former detained immigrants and advocacy groups filed suit today against Michael Chertoff, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), demanding that DHS issue comprehensive and enforceable regulations governing detention standards for immigration detainees.  At present, no federally-mandated regulations exist, resulting in inconsistent and substandard living conditions, grossly inadequate medical care, and the widespread abuse of detainee rights. 

“DHS is one of the largest jailers in the world,” said Paromita Shah, Associate Director of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, one of the plaintiffs in the suit. “But it behaves like a lawless local sheriff. The refusal to adopt comprehensive, binding regulations has contributed to a system in which thousands of immigration detainees are routinely denied necessary medical care, visitation, legal materials, or functioning telephones.”

 "I was detained for six years,” said Rafiu Abimbola, one of the detainee plaintiffs. “The telephones frequently did not work and legal materials were unavailable or out of date. Because I was managing my case on my own, this was extremely hard for me. DHS did not attempt to fix these problems. When I complained to the jail, I never received a response, and sometimes was punished for complaining. There are no consequences to the government for failing to obey its own standards.”

 Last year, DHS detained approximately 300,000 immigrants, primarily based on charges of non-criminal immigration violations.  On any given day, DHS holds approximately 30,000 immigrants in custody.  Nevertheless, the treatment of immigration detainees is currently only governed by a DHS detention manual, which is neither legally enforceable nor universally applied.  Recent government reports have documented patterns of non-compliance with the detention manual, and last year former detainees and advocates attested to the inadequate medical care at detention facilities at a congressional hearing.

“The DHS manual fails to address basic aspects of detention,” said Janis Roseheuvel, director of Families for Freedom, one the plaintiffs in the suit. “And what standards the manual does include are weak and unenforceable.   How many more people must suffer before DHS starts to behave like the mature warden it has become?”

The need for enforceable, uniform standards is especially critical in light of the patchwork system currently employed to house detainees: in addition to using of its own facilities, DHS contracts with local jails and privately operated prisons for this purpose. Detention regulations, the lawsuit contends, are necessary to ensure humane and uniform treatment of detainees and prevent future violations.

 The suit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, specifically demands that DHS fulfill its obligation under the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”) to respond to a January 2007 petition submitted asking that DHS develop detention regulations—a petition that, over one year later, DHS continues to ignore.  The plaintiffs seek a court order requiring DHS to begin the rulemaking process, or at the very least, explain why it has not done so.

Plaintiffs—the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers’ Guild, Families For Freedom, and two former detained immigrants—are represented by the Jerome N. Frank Legal Services Organization at Yale Law School.

LINK TO COPY OF COMPLAINT

JOINT PRESS RELEASE

National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, American Immigration Law Foundation, and National Network to End Violence Against Immigrant Women

 

April 24, 2008

Government’s Newly-Announced Directive Will Benefit Thousands

of Immigrant Victims of Domestic Violence

 

The National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG), the National Network to End Violence Against Immigrant Women (National Network), and the American Immigration Law Foundation (AILF), applaud the government’s recent directive to allow battered immigrant women and children the opportunity to apply for a “green card” regardless of their manner of entry into the U.S.

 

This directive, interpreting the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), carries out Congress’ intent to protect immigrant victims of domestic violence from further harm by clearing their path to legal permanent resident status. Congress has recognized that “Many immigrant women live trapped and isolated in violent homes, afraid to turn to anyone for help. They fear continued abuse if they stay, and deportation if they attempt to leave.” The law allows battered immigrants who are married to abusive U.S. citizens or permanent residents the right to apply for lawful immigration status independent of the cooperation of the abuser.

 

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced its interpretation of VAWA-related provisions in the immigration act in an April 11, 2008 memorandum to the USCIS field offices. This memorandum makes clear that battered immigrant spouses and children who satisfy other legal requirements are eligible to apply for lawful permanent residency even if they entered the U.S. without official inspection. Previously, individual USCIS field

offices adopted conflicting policies. A number of USCIS field offices denied “green cards” to battered immigrants in violation of the law, solely because they had entered the U.S. without inspection. Under the new policy, survivors of abuse who previously were denied status may seek reconsideration of their applications. (See CIS Fact Sheet.)

 

NIPNLG, the National Network and AILF worked with their networks of advocates and with members of Congress to persuade USCIS that this is the correct interpretation of the law. Senator Edward Kennedy and Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren spearheaded Congressional efforts to protect and ensure the safety of this group of immigrant survivors of abuse by allowing them to complete the lawful permanent residence process. “USCIS’ decision to accept applications from this vulnerable group of immigrants is momentous,” said Mary Kenney of AILF. Ellen Kemp of NIPNLG added, “Since VAWA was enacted in 1994, there have been more than 42,000 courageous battered immigrants who took a step away from an abusive relationship by filing an application under the VAWA. These survivors of abuse have been rigorously scrutinized and approved by USCIS at the first step of the immigration process. This interpretation makes clear that battered immigrants, including those who have entered the U.S. without inspection, may pursue the second step of seeking lawful permanent residence and achieving independence from their abusers.”

 

For more information:

 

Gail Pendleton, National Network to End Violence Against Immigrant Women, (774) 269-3110, glpendleton@earthlink.net

 

Ellen Kemp, National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, (617) 227-9727 ext. 4, ellen@nationalimmigrationproject.org

 

Mary Kenney, American Immigration Law Foundation, (202) 742-5609, mkenney@ailf.org

 

The National Network to End Violence Against Immigrant Women is co-chaired by Asista Immigration Technical Assistance, Legal Momentum's Immigrant Women Program, and the Family Violence Prevention Fund.

 

Click here for CIS VAWA EWI adjustment guidance memorandum (4/11/08).

Click here for CIS VAWA EWI Fact Sheet (4/22/08).

Immigration Detainees and the Project Petition DHS to Issue Enforceable, Comprehensive Immigration Detention Standards

On January 25, 2007, eighty-four immigration detainees, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, and six other immigrant rights organizations formally petitioned the Department of Homeland Security today (DHS) to issue regulations, under the Administrative Procedures Act, governing detention standards for immigration detainees. Currently, the treatment of immigration detainees, including living conditions, health care, and access to legal materials, is governed by a DHS detention manual, which is neither legally enforceable nor universally applied.

Despite ten years of government management, abuses and detention standard violations in immigration detention facilities are commonplace. Also, there is no meaningful process for detainees to address grievances or standard violations. It is imperative that the Department of Homeland Security act to address these longstanding problems.

The additional petitioners are the American Immigration Lawyers Association, American Immigration Law Foundation Legal Action Center, Casa de Proyecto Libertad, Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc., Families for Freedom, and National Immigrant Justice Center. The petition was prepared by students at New York University School of Law, under the supervision of Professor Wishnie, now at Yale Law School.




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