FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - As the Senate Judiciary Committee met today to examine
immigration, the American Civil Liberties Union urged lawmakers to reject two
proposals that would deprive immigrants of their right to appeal and overburden
the judicial system. The Judiciary Committee recently passed an immigration bill
that does not include these two objectionable provisions, but lawmakers may yet
seek to include them in the final measure.
"These proposed amendments pose serious problems, in effect barring the
courthouse door for many immigrants who deserve their day in court," said
Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "Too
many provisions of the various immigration bills paint immigrants as the new
scapegoats. Congress must approach the issue in a manner that upholds our
commitment to our core American values."
The two proposed changes to the legislation were included in Sections 701 and
707 of the "Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006," but were not in the
final version adopted by the committee. Both provisions would limit the
effective right of immigrants to appeal adverse rulings on their cases.
Section 701 would direct all immigration appeals to the United States Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, greatly increasing the workload of that
court. While the Senate Judiciary Committee did not include this proposal in its
bill, today’s hearing examined that proposal. The ACLU urged lawmakers to reject
the radical proposal, which would undermine the rights of immigrants to judicial
review, noting the Federal Circuit has no experience with immigration, civil
rights or related constitutional claims. That court currently hears only cases
concerning patents, trademarks and veterans’ benefits.
Opposition to the proposal to give exclusive jurisdiction to the Federal
Circuit has been diverse: the Chief Judges of the Seventh and Ninth Circuit
Courts of Appeal and numerous law school deans and professors have voiced their
concerns.
Section 707 of the bill would create a new barrier to judicial review of
immigration appeals by instituting one-judge pre-screening of cases that get to
the federal circuit court level. Under this provision, if the judge does not act
on a case within 60 days, the case gets dismissed. If the judge does find
the case meritorious, that judge would then issue a "certificate of
reviewability" that allows the case to be heard by a three-judge panel.
The ACLU noted that given the high workloads faced by America’s federal
courts, it is all too likely that many immigrants’ appeals would never receive
serious review from a judge and would be dismissed without any judicial
consideration of their merits.
"Due process should not be undermined under the guise of immigration reform,"
said Timothy D. Sparapani, an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "This unwise proposal
transferring 11,000 or more cases per year to a dozen judges should be
rejected."