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A Law Without Discretion

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The Supreme Court has agreed to take up the issue of whether legal immigrants who have committed a crime in the United States can be deported without legal recourse. A 1996 immigration bill passed by a GOP-controlled Congress gave officials at the Immigration and Naturalization Service the right to order immediate deportation without judicial review.

Consider the case of a Dominican native who has lived in the U.S. since she was 3 years old and is the mother of four U.S.-born children. Five years ago she pleaded guilty to selling an illegal drug and was ordered deported without recourse by the INS. A federal appeals court in New York has ruled that she should have access to a federal trial judge to argue the unfairness of the automatic deportation order against her. It is this issue that the Supreme Court agreed Friday to hear. A fair ruling would give Deb Calcano-Martinez and others like her an opportunity to contest the painful consequences of this overly strict law.

Tenacious immigrant rights lawyers, like those representing Calcano-Martinez, have had some success in fighting the deportation law. Courts that have concurred in their arguments include the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in California.

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Most immigrants who find themselves in this situation cannot afford a skilled defense. Thousands, some convicted of simple crimes long ago, have been deported without a hearing to native countries that they may barely remember.

This is a law without discretion and it should be revised.

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