Several New England affiliates of the American Civil
Liberties Union have filed a new class-action lawsuit that challenges the
immigration detention policies of US President Donald Trump.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of
Massachusetts announced on
Tuesday that it is joining with the ACLU of New Hampshire, the ACLU of Maine,
ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, the law firm Araujo and Fisher, the law firm
Foley Hoag, and the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinic to sue the Trump
administration over its policy of denying bond hearings to people detained by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The ACLU of Massachusetts described the denial of bond
hearings for ICE detainees as “a violation of statutory and constitutional
rights” that are “upending decades of settled law and established practice in
immigration proceedings.” The end result of this, the ACLU of Massachusetts
warned, is that “thousands of people in Massachusetts will be denied due
process.”
The complaint contends that the US Department of Justice
(DOJ) has been denying ICE detainees their rights by “systematically
reclassifying these people from the statutory authority of 8 U.S.C. § 1226,
which usually allows for the opportunity to request bond during removal
proceedings, to the no-bond detention provisions of 8 U.S.C. § 1225, which does
not apply to people arrested in the interior of the United States and placed in
removal proceedings.”
The ACLU of Massachusetts said that the administration’s
misclassification of detainees stems from actions taken by the Tacoma
Immigration Court in Washington, which in 2022 started “misclassifying § 1226
detainees arrested inside the United States as mandatory detainees under §
1225, solely because they initially entered the country without permission.”
The lawsuit has been filed on behalf of Jose Arnulfo
Guerrero Orellana, an immigrant who resides in Massachusetts and has no
criminal record, but who was detained by ICE last week and has been denied the
right to challenge his detention. The complaint asks that due process be
restored for Orellana and others who have been similarly detained and held
unlawfully.
Daniel McFadden, managing attorney at the ACLU of
Massachusetts, argued that the administration’s actions violate fundamental
constitutional rights.
“All people in the United States are entitled to due
process—without exception,” he said. “When the government arrests
any person inside the United States, it must be required to prove to a judge
that there is an actual reason for the person’s detention. Our client and
others like him have a constitutional and statutory right to receive a bond
hearing for exactly that purpose.”
Annelise Araujo, founding principal and owner at
Boston-based law firm Araujo and Fisher, argued that the administration’s
detention policy “violates due process and upends nearly 30 years of
established practice.”
“The people impacted by this policy are neighbors,
friends, and family members, living peacefully in the United States and making
important contributions to our communities,” she said. “Currently, the only
recourse is to file individual habeas petitions for each detained client—a
process that keeps people detained longer and stretches the resources of our
courts.”
-Brad Reed, Common Dreams
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