Monday, September 9, 2024

Family Unity Parole in Place Legal Clinic Toolkit And Video

 

This American Bar Association Toolkit was designed to help legal service providers design and implement pro se legal clinics where volunteers can help eligible individuals complete and submit applications for the President Biden's Family Unity Parole in Place program. Litigation has put the program on hold.

You can download the toolkit HERE

Hat tip to LexisNexis Immigration!

KJ

September 9, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Crimmigration Realothetical

Today in Crimmigration, I covered Zarate v. U.S. Attorney General, 26 F.4th 1196 (11th Cir. 2022), a CIMT case that could easily be turned into a realothetical for covering CIMT & the Strict Categorical Approach.

The basic issue is whether violating 42 U.S.C. 408(a)(7)(B) amounts to a CIMT. The statute reads:

Whoever.. for … the purpose of obtaining anything of value from any  person, or for any other purpose... with intent to deceive, falsely represents a number to be the social security account number assigned by the Commissioner of Social Security to him or to another person, when in fact such number is not the social security account number assigned by the Commissioner of Social Security to him or to such other person… "

The 11th Circuit defines a CIMT as requiring: (1) Reprehensible conduct and (2) Culpable mental state. After setting out this definition, the court takes the BIA to task for not even bothering to examine the first issue and for screwing up the latter. The case focuses on the "for any other purpose" language highlighted above to indicate that one could violate the statute without fraudulent intent and therefore not commit a CIMT.

Here's another interesting nugget about Zarate. When looking into this case, I stumbled across Emma Blue, An Ouroboros of Sorts: Eleventh Circuit Remands to BIA as “Moral Turpitude” Continues Creating Division," 74 Mercer Law Review 1549 (2023). The article contains the following facts not found in the 11th Circuit opinion:

Ruperto Hernandez Zarate needed a job to support his child’s surgeries and cleft pallet complications. As a citizen and national of Mexico, he did not have a Social Security number to apply for a U.S. job. In his effort to overcome this obstacle and help his child, he used a Social Security number that was not his own.

I think these facts are particularly interesting given the categorical approach's total disassociation from facts. "Elements, not conduct," as they say. These facts challenge students to think about the categorical approach in a different way from how they might consider, say, Equivel-Quintana.

-KitJ

September 9, 2024 in Teaching Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

Immigration: A closer look ahead of Trump-Harris debate

45_donald_trump Kamala_Harris_Vice_Presidential_Portrait

Official White House Photos

Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris face off in a debate tomorrow nightThe Arizona Republic reviews the candidates' stances on immigration, which likely will come up.  It is an understatement to say thatr the two candidates have very different views on immigration.

 

 

UPDATE (Sept. 9, Noon PST):  Immigration expert Nolan Rappaport for The Hill has some suggested immigration debate questions for the candidates.

KJ

September 9, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Sunday, September 8, 2024

TRAC Immigration: Who Is Being Given Humanitarian Parole: Latest Data

TRAC Immigration provides the latest humanitarian parole data.

KJ

September 8, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Neo-Nazi and far right groups seize on Trump’s anti-immigration rhetoric

45_donald_trump

Official White House Photo

The Guardian (United Kingdom) reports the following:  "Neo-Nazi groups and the online far right are latching on to the anti-immigration rhetoric coming from Donald Trump’s campaign for the White House in an effort to recruit new supporters and spread their extremism to broader audiences."  The story offers details about the reliance of the extreme right in their recruitment efforts on Trump's anti-immigrant agenda.

KJ

September 8, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Former UK Prime Minister: Brexit failed – and it triggered mass immigration

Brexit

Photo from the Brexit campaign courtesy of Don Roth

News from the UKFormer British Prime Minister Tony Blair in an interview stated that Brexit , the 2016 referendum to leave the European Union, has failed and Britain has ended up with mass immigration instead taking “back control" over immigration.

“We’ve swapped out younger, usually single people coming in from Europe to work in hospitality, technology and other sectors for much increased immigration from Asia and Africa,” he said.

The exclusive interview was with Geordie Greig, editor-in-chief of The Independent.  Blair highlighted the way “we have weakened ourselves” as a result of Brexit.

The interview was occasioned by the publication of Blair's book On Leadership.

On Leadership by Tony Blair

 

KJ

September 8, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Saturday, September 7, 2024

California Governor Vetoes bill to help undocumented immigrants buy homes

Governor Newsom convenes special session to prevent gas price spikes, save Californians money at the pump

Official State of California Photo

California Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill yesterday that would have made some undocumented immigrants eligible for state-supported home loans.  Passed by the California Legislature, the bill had sparked criticism from Republicans in this election year.  Former President Donald Trump responded to the bill by saying that he would ban undocumented immigrants from receiving home mortgages if re-elected President. 

Governor Newsom cited funding concerns in his veto message:

"To the Members of the California State Assembly:

I am returning Assembly Bill 1840 without my signature.

This bill seeks to prohibit the disqualification of applicants from one of California Housing Finance Agency's (CalHFA) home purchase assistance programs based solely on their immigration status.

Given the finite funding available . . .  , expanding program eligibility must be carefully considered within the broader context of the annual state budget to ensure we manage our resources effectively.
,
I am unable to sign this bill."

Although the home mortgage bill received some attention, the really big immigration-related bill in this session of the California Legislature remains before Governor Gavin Newsom.  The Opportunity for All Act, if signed into law, would allow public universities and colleges to employ students, regardless of their immigration status. 

Assembly Bill 2568 calls for University of California, California State University and California community college systems to provide equal access to on-campus employment opportunities for undocumented students. The bill passed the Legislature in a 41-7 Assembly vote in August.  Will Newsom sign the bill into law?  Stay tuned.

KJ

September 7, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

US Undocumented Population Estimated at 11.7 Million in July 2023

Without offering an explanation, Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential campaign has alleged that there are 20 million undocumented immigrants in the United States.  Here is the latest estimate based on data.

Demographer Robert Warren for the Center for Migration Studies, who has been making estimates like these for many years, estimates the undocumented population at 11.7 million.  Warren's estimate is based on data collected by two  U.S. Census Bureau surveys, the American Community Survey (ACS) and the Current Population Survey (CPS).

 

KJ

READ THE FULL REPORT

September 7, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Friday, September 6, 2024

Beyond the Border: U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Presence at Racial Justice Protests in Summer of 2020

Many people mistakenly believe that the role of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is confined to border enforcement.

But in the summer of 2020, CBP officers were deployed alongside local law enforcement to police those participating in protests far from the border demanding racial justice.

As the Council and our partners the Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) found in a report, CBP overstepped its mandate and became involved in policing these protests, often without first consulting city and state authorities. Through our litigation, we secured documents from CBP that showed top officials were concerned that its agents weren’t trained to interact with protestors, and initially did not know that CBP agents had arrested protestors in unmarked vans.

KJ

Go in-depth: keeping CBP accountable

September 6, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Why Trump is losing ground on immigration to Harris?

45_donald_trump Kamala_Harris_Vice_Presidential_Portrait

I am not sure that this Washington Examiner story ("Why Trump is losing ground on immigration to Harris") is accurate.  Is former President Donald Trump in fact losing ground to Vice President Kamala Harris on immigration?  Immigration remains a leading issue in the 2024 presidential campaign.  Some might say that the issue's prominence -- one of Trump's signature issues -- alone is a benefit to the Trump campaign as it keeps Harris's immigration positions.

KJ

September 6, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

The economics of immigration

 

Listen to a brief discussion of how immigration affects housing, economic growth, and the like. For further analysis of the economics of immigration, click here.

KJ 

September 6, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Judge Puts on ICE -- At Least for Now -- Biden's Parole in Place Program

Flag of Texas

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

News from the Lone Star State:  A federal district judge yesterday extended the temporary block of the implementation of the Biden administration’s “Keeping Families Together”/Parole in Place policy, which aims to provide a path to citizenship for nearly half a million undocumented immigrants married to U.S. citizens.  Here is the order:  Download TX v. DHS order 9-4-24

KJ

September 5, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

The Daily: Kamala Harris's Record on Immigration

Kamala_Harris_Vice_Presidential_Portrait

Official White House Photo

Today's The Daily looks at Kamala Harris's Record on Immigration.  It is interesting but not surprising.  The Daily describes the episode as follows:

"As Vice President Kamala Harris moves into the final stretch of her campaign, one of the biggest issues both for voters and for Republicans attacking her is the surge of migrants crossing the southern border over the past four years.

Zolan Kanno-Youngs, who covers the White House for The Times, discusses Ms. Harris’s record on border policy."

KJ

September 5, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Report -- Held Incommunicado: The Failed Promise of Language Access in Immigration Detention

A report (Held Incommunicado: The Failed Promise of Language Access in Immigration Detention) of the Kathryn O. Greenberg Immigrant Justice Clinic concludes that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is not providing sufficient translation services to detainees in its facilities.  Andrea Castillo for the Los Angeles Times discusses the report.   Detainees' main complaints included being unable to ask for medical care and having to rely on other detainees for the translation of sensitive documents.  

The punch line of the report:

"Together, these data paint a clear—and troubling—picture of language access in 125 immigration detention centers that collectively hold approximately 95% of the people that ICE detains.16 Specifically, the data show a nationwide pattern of ICE failing to meet its language access obligations under its own rules and federal law. This report also sheds new light on the  wide-ranging harms and often life-altering consequences of this failure for the [Limited English Proficient (LEP)] people that ICE detains. And, while this report does not cover other aspects of language access in immigration detention or with respect to other agencies involved in the immigration legal system, its findings suggest the need for closer examination of the government’s compliance with its language access obligations in these contexts as well.

The findings in this report are critical, both due to the importance of language access to LEP individuals’ fundamental needs and rights and because the very nature of ICE’s language access failures makes it effectively impossible for detained LEP
individuals to raise, challenge, or remedy these problems on their own. As such, this report concludes with recommendations for the federal government and other actors to respond to the urgent problems that this study reveals."

KJ

September 5, 2024 in Current Affairs, Immigration Law Clinics | Permalink | Comments (0)

Chinese migrants heading to Mexico

 

September 5, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Immigration Article of the Day: Arbitrary-and-Capricious Review: The Colonial Roots of Administrative Discrimination by Carrie Rosenbaum

Carrie Rosenbaum

Arbitrary-and-Capricious Review: The Colonial Roots of Administrative Discrimination by Carrie Rosenbaum

Abstract

Despite the Supreme Court's watershed decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, deference to the administrative state will endure in part via arbitrary-and-capricious review. Seemingly benign, arbitrary-and-capricious review has evaded definition, led to controversial and surprising results, and has been characterized as antidemocratic, obscuring judicial bias. It has also done work seemingly meant for other doctrines, like equal protection. However, even if arbitrariness review may be doing work meant for equal protection, it not inherently a doctrine of anti-discrimination. This article will reveal the formative and invisiziblized role of racialized subordination that implicitly colors arbitrariness review by historicizing the doctrine through the lens of its colonial and Gilded Age origins, and plenary power, an overt doctrine of discrimination. This exploration will help set expectations regarding the limits and possibilities of this highly consequential but seemingly benign administrative law doctrine.

KJ

September 5, 2024 in Current Affairs, Law Review Articles & Essays | Permalink | Comments (0)

Resources on Labor-Based Deferred Action

Professor Mary Yanik shared information that Tulane, NIPNLG, NILC, Organized Power in Numbers, & Arriba Las Vegas Worker Center have released an updated version of the immigration practice manual on Labor-Based Deferred Action (also known as DALE). This update shares lessons learned from this practice over the past one and a half years, information on the process for renewals and extensions, advising in light of the upcoming election, and so more. We also link to updated exhibits with example applications and an online chart with information on state/local agencies, referral resources, and guestworker grace periods.

Two  additional DALE resources:  (1) to join a listserv of attorneys, organizers, and advocates sharing information and updates on DALE,  email [email protected]; and (2) Law Student DALE Orientation (registration link)webinar on Friday, September 6, 12:30 to 2pm EST.

KJ

September 5, 2024 in Current Affairs, Immigration Law Clinics | Permalink | Comments (0)

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Mixed-status families and immigrant families with children continued avoiding safety net programs

From the Urban Institute:  

KJ

September 4, 2024 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Catholic experts respond to Pope Francis on repelling migrants being 'a grave sin'.

Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Continuing with the religious theme of today's immigration article of the day, Peter Pinedo for the Catholic News Network looked at Pope Francis's statements on immigration policy last week and his criticism of “those who systematically work by all means to drive away migrants,” saying that “this when done knowingly and deliberately, is a grave sin.”  

Though Pope Francis's most recent remarks involved migrants in the Mediterranean, his words were also "seen as controversial in the U.S. because of their severity and because of their timing in the middle of an American presidential election in which the issue looms large."

The article offers thoughts of several of the country’s Catholic immigration experts and advocates to get their reactions to the Pope's statements on immigration.

KJ

September 4, 2024 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Immigration Article of the Day: Nonrefoulement: Responding to Asylum-seekers through the Prism of Subversive Stories: A Study of Three Trials of Innocence by Craig Mousin

Image preview

Nonrefoulement: Responding to Asylum-seekers through the Prism of Subversive Stories: A Study of Three Trials of Innocence,” a chapter in Furthering Interfaith Biblical Scholarship, A Festschrift in Memory of André LaCocque (Wipf & Stock, 2024), links biblical scholarship to asylum and refugee law to engage the critical issue of how nation-states respond to the contemporary demands of asylum-seekers.  The chapter focuses on Dr. LaCocque’s contention that the biblical narrative calls all who follow it to respond to a daily trial of innocence to do well or to not do well.  The first trial briefly explores the world’s failure to respond to refugees prior to and during World War II.  Subsequently, with the advent of the Refugee Convention of 1951 and the United States Refugee Act of 1980, the adopting nations established the second trial as individual asylum-seekers present their cases to determine eligibility for asylum and resettlement.   The initial promises of the Convention and the Refuge Act undergo a third trial as increased numbers of asylum-seekers flee conditions unanticipated by the drafters of the Convention including the consequences of climate change and exploitive extractive industries that frequently corrupt governments that repress their citizens. Extensive biblical scholarship regarding immigration and refugees focuses on the biblical call to welcome the stranger.  Although this chapter recognizes that imperative, it further explores the subversive stories that can encourage asylum-seekers, those who work with them, and rebut some of the arguments that white Christian nationalists employ to support policies of exclusion and deportation. 
 
KJ

September 4, 2024 in Books, Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)