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Notes -
We haven't discussed deportations, recently, and appellate litigator (and formula Scalia clerk, for those who care about that sort of thing) Adam Unikowsky posted a good explanation of AARP v Trump/WMM v Trump, this morning. The situation seems pretty Kafka-esque:
Setting aside ICE acting in bad faith, invocations of rights using colloquial language can be deemed lawfully ineffectual by courts, even if the intent is obvious to any reasonable person:
The Louisiana Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal. People sometimes complain about lawyers using the right "magic words" being too powerful, but the rest of us being required to use magic words is a much bigger problem, in my opinion.
Back to this case, the ACLU's brief didn't include the specific circumstances of their communications with their two clients or how many people would have been deported on the same flight, but the two clients were able to describe notices of an impending deportation.
As for the ruling, itself, Unikowsky writes:
There's a lot more (including why Unikowsky disagrees with Alito's dissent and why the lack of transparency by ICE and its litigators is wrong), and it's worth reading in full, but that's the jist of it. SCOTUS having granted an injunction, the question of whether the secret 12-36 hour habeas petition window ICE stipulated satisfies due process requirements goes back down to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
But were deportations always so Kafka-esque, or is this new? Did previous administrations act in bad faith, like this? And where are the voices that are both pro-deportation and pro-legal protections against fed fuckery? As HL Menken said:
So every alien in the US has a legal right for a stay of deportation for at least what, two days? Probably more like a few weeks? As long as they say the magic words? From first principles I’d say we should have a judge rubber stamping the deportation warrants with a chance for a public defender to object when appropriate. But I don’t see how a functional deportation process functions under a standard deportation process. How different would a ‘good’ process of deporting millions look?
Again this whole thing would be easier, ironically even for Trump, had Trump not personally torpedoed a major compromise immigration bill before coming in to office. Which among other things would have increased the number of available judges.
We have been over this - the bill wasn't really a compromise; it was a back-door way of legalizing the hitherto-flagrantly illegal stunts the Biden Administration, like the Obama administration before it (but more so) had been using to throw the borders open.
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