Tightened law greatly expanded list of crimes triggering deportation
Sunday, February 4, 2007
By Kristi Heim
Seattle Times staff reporter
More than 160 Cambodians, including a dozen from the Seattle area, have been sent back to their native land in recent years.
Some are gang members involved in killings. Others were found guilty of nothing worse than public urination.
Their deportation followed a 1996 law requiring immigration officials to deport green-card holders convicted of at least one "aggravated felony." It didn't matter how long ago the crime was committed or whether the sentence had been served.
The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act also expanded the list of crimes triggering deportation.
Aggravated felonies were previously defined as crimes such as murder, drug trafficking and firearms trafficking.
The new law included a much broader range of offenses such as illegal gambling, receiving stolen property, possession of marijuana and lying to immigration authorities.
The requirements were changed so that any noncitizen receiving sentences of at least one year would be deported, instead of sentences of five years or more.
That meant some immigrants only convicted of misdemeanors could be deported, since some relatively minor crimes carry suspended sentences of one year.
After the definition was expanded, the number of people ordered deported rose from about 10,000 in 1992 to more than 26,000 in 2005.
Most were from Mexico, followed by the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Vietnam and El Salvador.
Lacking extradition agreements with Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and other countries, the U.S. could not send refugees from those countries back immediately.
Some refugees remained in federal detention for years. That changed in 2001, when the U.S. Supreme Court, ruling in favor of a Seattle man, said immigration officials could not indefinitely hold detainees whose countries wouldn't accept them.
The U.S. signed an extradition agreement with Cambodia in 2002.
More than 1,500 Cambodian refugees await deportation. Many of them are in Washington, which has the third-largest Cambodian community in the U.S. Most have lived in the U.S. since childhood.
Before 1996, judges could grant waivers to offenders who could show they had been rehabilitated or that deportation would hurt family members who were U.S. citizens. The new law removed most of that discretion.
Deportees like Ho Beua have virtually no chance of returning. They're barred from applying for 10 years. Many crime convictions, including those involving violence and drugs, bar them permanently.
Backers of the tightened law argue that even tougher measures, such as an even longer list of deportable offenses, are needed because immigrants or refugees who commit crimes pose a threat to society.
Critics say the law's broad brush is bad policy that is destroying many families. They want to exclude misdemeanors from the list of deportable offenses and restore the ability of judges to weigh other factors.
Jay Stansell, a federal public defender in Seattle who has represented many of the Cambodians, argues the laws should at least reconsider the case of refugees, who fled war-torn countries against their will.
"It's a particularly bad thing to do to retraumatize the families we supposedly have given refuge to," he said.
"None of these people have done anything to deserve the loss of their husbands or sons."
Sunday, February 4, 2007
By Kristi Heim
Seattle Times staff reporter
More than 160 Cambodians, including a dozen from the Seattle area, have been sent back to their native land in recent years.
Some are gang members involved in killings. Others were found guilty of nothing worse than public urination.
Their deportation followed a 1996 law requiring immigration officials to deport green-card holders convicted of at least one "aggravated felony." It didn't matter how long ago the crime was committed or whether the sentence had been served.
The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act also expanded the list of crimes triggering deportation.
Aggravated felonies were previously defined as crimes such as murder, drug trafficking and firearms trafficking.
The new law included a much broader range of offenses such as illegal gambling, receiving stolen property, possession of marijuana and lying to immigration authorities.
The requirements were changed so that any noncitizen receiving sentences of at least one year would be deported, instead of sentences of five years or more.
That meant some immigrants only convicted of misdemeanors could be deported, since some relatively minor crimes carry suspended sentences of one year.
After the definition was expanded, the number of people ordered deported rose from about 10,000 in 1992 to more than 26,000 in 2005.
Most were from Mexico, followed by the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Vietnam and El Salvador.
Lacking extradition agreements with Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and other countries, the U.S. could not send refugees from those countries back immediately.
Some refugees remained in federal detention for years. That changed in 2001, when the U.S. Supreme Court, ruling in favor of a Seattle man, said immigration officials could not indefinitely hold detainees whose countries wouldn't accept them.
The U.S. signed an extradition agreement with Cambodia in 2002.
More than 1,500 Cambodian refugees await deportation. Many of them are in Washington, which has the third-largest Cambodian community in the U.S. Most have lived in the U.S. since childhood.
Before 1996, judges could grant waivers to offenders who could show they had been rehabilitated or that deportation would hurt family members who were U.S. citizens. The new law removed most of that discretion.
Deportees like Ho Beua have virtually no chance of returning. They're barred from applying for 10 years. Many crime convictions, including those involving violence and drugs, bar them permanently.
Backers of the tightened law argue that even tougher measures, such as an even longer list of deportable offenses, are needed because immigrants or refugees who commit crimes pose a threat to society.
Critics say the law's broad brush is bad policy that is destroying many families. They want to exclude misdemeanors from the list of deportable offenses and restore the ability of judges to weigh other factors.
Jay Stansell, a federal public defender in Seattle who has represented many of the Cambodians, argues the laws should at least reconsider the case of refugees, who fled war-torn countries against their will.
"It's a particularly bad thing to do to retraumatize the families we supposedly have given refuge to," he said.
"None of these people have done anything to deserve the loss of their husbands or sons."
12 comments:
You see what I mean: They think
Cambodia is a dumping ground.
Don't they know that we have
enough of our own problems to
hack? What is an Evil Empire?
i think it is the right choice of the US Government to deport felony that cannot rehabilitated back to Cambodia. those criminals had their chances. there are good people genuinly want to come to a new country and start their lives fresh in a country that gives opportunies that would otherwise restricted in their home country.
Bullshit, those people were good
people, and you guys turned them
into Evil and then send them back
to destroy us. Cut the rhetoric,
will ya? We don't care what you
guy do, if you screw them up, you
should repair them yourself. Don't
send them here. We don't have the
Cashes for that. And whatever
happened to your superior
knowledges that you have been
bragging about, huh?
Sounds more like you guys are
nothing more than a liars and
finger pointers.
Hmm ... I wonder what happened to
all the anti-CPP? Looks like
They are losing the battle on their
own Evil home land. Mua ha ha
ha ...
This place started to look a bit
like a ghost's town, now. Mua ha ha
ha ...
Let's go, you Khmer bashers.
To 9:04 You are obviously of the sort that always blames others for things gone wrong. It is nobody but themselves they have to blame for their fate. Whether the blame lies with their parents, their environment, they ran with the wrong crowd, they are still first and foremost guests in a foreign country - green cards are issued for periods of 3, 5, or 10 years, and they will always be Khmer, no matter whether criminal or good. If the law says they have to leave they will have to leave - period. Then their home-country will have to take care of them. What do you mean, you don't have the money for this? Where is your Khmer solidarity? Your English suggests that you spent quite some time in the U. S. as well, so you know very well what the laws there are. Everyone is responsible for their own lives, right?
Blaming others? What blame? The
truth is the truth, and here it is
again:
When the Khmer left here they were
not criminals.
After living in the Evil Empire
(the US), now they are criminals.
The US-Khmers always bragging about
how they can fix this and fix that
in their space-aged Evil land, but
show none.
The US-Khmers always bragging about
wanting to help Khmers, but they
are sending Criminals to victimize
our poor people.
Where is the blame to all this,
huh? Why don't you learn to accept
the truth that you are nothing
more then a bullshit artist who
painted themself as highly
educated, angels, ..., innovators
but have nothing to backup your
claims. Stop embarassing youself
with excuses after excuses after
excuses, will ya? Just who are you
trying to kid? Even our third
graders could easily tell that you
are a fake, get it?
.
What's your problem 1:11? So you are saying there are no Khmer criminals? Who's kidding whom?
Nope, Khmer crimes usually are
misdemeanors, not hard cores
gangsters. When they left here,
they are good people, but you guys
drafted them in to your evil clan
and destroyed their lifes. You must
learn to take your own
responsibility and stop blaming our
people for everything. We don't
live with them, you are.
Moreover, since you claimed to
be able to fixed all problems, let
see some action, shall we? Sending
your criminals that you created
back to destroy Cambodia is not
an acceptable solution, okay?
Show us some of your superiority
that you claimed to have over us
to back up your claim, will ya?
Otherwise, no one is going to
listen to your bullshits that you
have been spraying all over the
places here. Doesn't that make
sense?
5:39 Keep on dreaming. I guess you live on another planet. Get real. Who said anything about fixing problems? And who says I don't live in Cambodia? Just because I happen to fluent in English? You must be pretty biased. Yul te?
Who care where you live? You could
well be a spy to try to create
roumors like other spies did, in
order to divide us and our
neigbors ... If so, I say you are
wasting your time, Dude.
Aside from that, what is your
point? Cambodia is a dumping
ground, and everyone should send
all their ciminals over, or
something?
9:02 AM isn't from Cambodia. What Cambodian would use the worde dude? He's a fake ass "dude" sent to interupt KI.
Well 12:39 - you are right, he does not sound Khmer at all. But a lot of overseas Khmer talk like this, and I am thinking the majority of those posting on this blog are overseas Khmer. They don't have the faintest idea what life is like in Cambodia now. Sometimes they come to visit for 2 or 3 weeks and then they think they know everything. Khnom anat menuh douc nih.
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