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David Bier

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President Obama's Deportation Deferral Order Is Legal

Posted: 07/26/2012 10:30 am

"We will see each other down the line in litigation." That threat was leveled by Rep. Steve King (R-IA) at Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano during a Congressional hearing last week. After President Obama's decision to temporarily defer deportations for certain young undocumented immigrants, Rep. King immediately stated his intention to challenge its legality in court. Based on legal precedent, however, his lawsuit is meritless and will be quickly dismissed.

Deferred action is not only legal, but was in regular use before the administration's decision to expand it. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) Commissioner Doris Meissner pointed out back in 2000 that "INS has prosecutorial discretion, and it exercises it every day." Meissner specifically noted that this discretion "applies not only to the decision to issue, serve, or file a Notice to Appear (NTA), but also... deciding whom to stop, question, and arrest... settling or dismissing a proceeding, granting deferred action, or staying a final order."

In Reno v. American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, 525 U.S. 471 (1999), the Supreme Court affirmed that "in the deportation process, [a]t each stage the Executive has discretion to abandon the endeavor, and at the time [the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA)] was enacted the INS had been engaging in a regular practice (known as "deferred action") of exercising that discretion for humanitarian reasons or simply for its own convenience.... many provisions of the IIRIRA are aimed at protecting the Executive's discretion from the courts--indeed, that can fairly be said to be the theme of the legislation."

These administrative and court decisions have clear basis in legislation. As noted by the Court in Reno, "8 U. S. C. § 1252(g)... restricts judicial review of the Attorney General's 'decision or action' to 'commence proceedings, adjudicate cases, or execute removal orders against any alien under this Act.'" Moreover, 8 U.S.C. § 1227(d) under "Deportable Aliens" explicitly discusses "the authority of the Secretary of Homeland Security or the Attorney General to grant a stay of removal or deportation in any case not described in this subsection," meaning that Congress authorized deportation deferrals.

Rep. King is not satisfied with this legal foundation. "I accepted the prosecutorial discretion when it dealt with individuals," he told Sec. Napolitano. "I do not when it deals with groups of people that are created by a memorandum." But this distinction is weak. Deferrals are still determined on a case-by-case basis. Prosecutors simply base their decisions on these categories, which is not new. Meissner's memo noted that criteria for its use in 2000 included length of residence, criminal history, humanitarian concerns, military service, and availability of agency resources.

Rep. King is also upset that if these young immigrants stay, some may be allowed to work in the U.S. "Our visas and work permits are a creation of Congress, not the executive branch," he told Sec. Napolitano. Yet as the secretary's memo notes, "this memorandum confers no substantive right, immigration status, or pathway to citizenship." Nonetheless, under current law 8 CFR § 274.12 (c)(14), DHS can issue Employment Authorization Documents (EADs) to any person "who has been granted deferred action... if the alien establishes an economic necessity for employment."

Pres. Bush used this deferral authority for undocumented immigrants during Hurricane Katrina, and Republican Governor of Mississippi Haley Barbour was thankful. "I don't know where we would have been in Mississippi after Katrina if it hadn't been for the Spanish speakers who came in to help rebuild," he said in 2010. "If they hadn't come and stayed for a few months or a couple years, we'd be way, way behind." Rep. King never threatened to drag Pres. Bush into court.

Immigration restrictionists may disagree with this particular use of prosecutorial discretion, but they do not disagree with its use in principle. When 60,000 Alabama businesses missed their state's deadline to sign up for E-Verify--the employment verification program designed to catch undocumented workers--the state extended them a temporary amnesty. Alabama DHS spokeswoman Katheryn Kennedy said, "Right now we're not penalizing businesses. We're trying to help them, to be a safe harbor." Georgia and Arizona had to offer similar E-Verify amnesties.

This decision would not allow Pres. Obama to refuse to enforce tax law, as Rep. King and conservative Charles Krauthammer have charged, but if millions of Americans suddenly refused to pay taxes, it would allow him to set enforcement priorities. Given a population of between 10 and 12 million undocumented immigrants, a decision that affects barely ten percent of them (1.4 million) seems justifiable from an administrative perspective. While the congressman believes the order is a general refusal to enforce immigration laws, this targeted approach has resulted in a record 1.2 million deportations in the president's first three years in office. The idea that the deportation record-holder is not enforcing immigration law is self-evidently absurd.

Discussing the Constitution's presidential pardon power, Federalist 74 concludes that "without an easy access to exceptions in favor of unfortunate guilt, justice would wear a countenance too sanguinary and cruel." The Founders understood that discretion plays an important role in responsible enforcement--a role recognized in the immigration laws Congress passed. If Congress wants to revisit the discretionary powers it has vested in the executive, it is free to do so. Until then, restrictionists will just have to deal with a few more immigrants picking vegetables, starting businesses, and providing services that benefit all Americans.

 
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nelthroppesq
Attorney in allentown,pa
07:56 PM on 08/09/2012
Prosecutorial discretion applies on a case by case basis, but where does the President get his power to say that he will not enforce the law period. If Congress passes a law, is the Executive allowed to thwart it because it goes against his wishes. Would not such a blanket use of executive authority undermine the basic premise that the President is to enforce the laws of this country? Is the President allowed to say that he will not enforce the drug laws if he is opposed to them even if Congress and a past President had signed them into law. That is the issue here. This President feels he can ignore the will of Congress or the laws if they are inconvenient to him. He pushes against the laws of the land and shows no restraint. He will use any means to enforce his will regardless.
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Fred Bronson
America Unite, Export and Deport
11:21 AM on 07/30/2012
I don't think it is, but if the courts say yes then at least it is discrimination. To forgive, give a free pass, pardon solely one group of people from the fraud they committed, the giving of false statements, the filing of fake, or no tax returns, allowing older men to have sex with 15 year old girls solely because it is their way. Is discrimination against the rest of us American's we need to sue and demand every one in prison for one of those crimes be set free.
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Karissa36
Saving lost boys and fighting pirates.
08:21 PM on 07/29/2012
MODERATORS -- WHY HASN'T THIS COMMENT BEEN POSTED?

inthedesert Commented 2 hours ago

"Sorry, but it isn't legal. And, most Americans know that this
was merely pandering to the illegals and their demands for the
total elimination of ALL immigration laws that affect them.
This is not going to happen."
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Karissa36
Saving lost boys and fighting pirates.
08:15 PM on 07/29/2012
Suppose a Prosecutor decided his entire office would no longer proceed on any DUI charges, and in addition invited everyone who previously had their license suspended due to DUI, to file some papers to get their driving privileges restored. Arguably, this would be legal under prosecutorial discretion.

It would not be right. Prosecutors have a duty to uphold the law, not deliberately subvert it. A Prosecutor deliberately making his own law, by refusing to uphold the law passed by the legislature, would quite rapidly find himself removed from office. The same should occur with Obama. Vote him out, before he starts picking and choosing what other laws he intends to subvert. We don't need or want a dictator, and that is what this is.
07:36 PM on 07/29/2012
"Given a population of between 10 and 12 million undocumented immigrants, a decision that affects barely ten percent of them (1.4 million) seems justifiable from an administrative perspective."

At what point does it become unjustifiable? The Morton Memo non-enforcement "discretion" theoretically covers the vast majority of illegal aliens. What if Obama suspended ALL deportations? A lot of "immigrant right advocates" are calling for that.
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
06:20 PM on 07/29/2012
Sorry, but it isn't legal. And, most Americans know that this was merely pandering to the illegals and their demands for the total elimination of ALL immigration laws that affect them. This is not going to happen.
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Snake1994
Snakebite!
05:20 PM on 07/28/2012
Say's who! the illegal immigrant advocates?
02:13 PM on 07/28/2012
So this guy is spouting legal case histories like he was one a lawyer, two a graduate from a major law school He graduated from 'Grove College" enrollment 2500 (twenty five hundred). A liberal arts college. His only expirence is 'teaching in Ecuador'. Taking any legal advice from him seems really funny. The group he works for is filled with LOBBYISTS, OLD TIME PAID LOBBYISTS FOR THE ILLEGALS. I would like to know how much the USA gov pays that group also. The USA gov pays la raza millions every year, more to come next year and every year thereafter. This writer isn't a legal consultant, he is unqualified to give law advice so he obviously got fed the 'case numbers' so he could sound offical. Ignore his agenda. Rep King is the first of many who will challenge this Obama attempted takeover of the powers of congress. Obama cannot pick and choose which part of laws he wants to ignore. Jan 2 2013 will be the end of the dream act forever.
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ugly american
"I drank what?"- Last words of Socrates
10:56 AM on 07/28/2012
This sounds like a great idea to some. It is very humane and understanding and if people are honest, it works great.
Downside: The people this move benefits are not honest. For every American high school honor graduate there are thousand more who will say they graduated or have a GED when they don't even know what a GED is because they just crossed the border.As of now, almost everyone ICE arrests claims they are DREAMer's and has to be let go because of this order.
All nations have immigration laws and there is nothing overly harsh about ours. Mexico and the Latin countries would like to say our laws are very harsh because we return their people to them and they would rather have the money those people send back from here.
Executive discretion may be legal but when it make the laws unenforceable that creates a conflict that should be examined by the courts. It was never intended to replace the laws or undo the ones the current president doesn't like.
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Catherine in Tulsa
Not mother?
10:39 AM on 07/28/2012
It's ironic that we are talking about illegals now, since If Romney gets elected, all he'll be doing is looking for the cheapest labor possible. Get ready for him to allow illegals to work in government position. They are what he is ultimately looking for. Or he promises them that if they 'self deport' they have a great job in the federal government waiting for them in Mexico.
09:22 PM on 07/27/2012
Another cheap labor, open border proponents trying to rationalize turning the U.S. into a third world country. Do the cheap labor types really believe that they can take advantage of the cheap labor that will come with open borders and unlimited immigration while avoiding the costs?
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Nuyorican21
Law Clerk
11:39 AM on 07/27/2012
Shhh, they'll try to claim that Reno is another 'unconstitutional decision' (like the ACA decision) by the Supreme Court, although Scalia himself wrote the 8-1 decision and the most liberal justice on the Court at the time was the lone dissenter, Justice Souter.
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Nuyorican21
Law Clerk
11:20 AM on 07/27/2012
Thank you.
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Llib Noswad
aka: Bill, Conservative
11:19 AM on 07/27/2012
"without an easy access to exceptions in favor of unfortunate guilt, justice would wear a countenance too sanguinary and cruel."

Very funny David, what in the world does illegal immigration have to do with "unfortunate guilt"? Maybe in a parallel universe it might.
11:01 AM on 07/27/2012
Deferred repatriation of undocumented alien youth only makes sense if we couple that policy directive with the swift and humane apprehension of the foreign nationals who smuggled said "youth" into our nation. Our immigration system will never work unless it is enforced.