Class Action Claims I.C.E. Uses Deep South Prisons to Keep Asylum-Seekers From Winning Parole
Class Action Claims I.C.E. Uses Deep South Prisons to Keep Asylum-Seekers From Winning Parole
Asylum-seekers kept behind bars in the Deep South are launching a class action lawsuit against the government.The lawsuit, led by the Southern Poverty Law Center and American Civil Liberties Union, claims the Trump administration is categorically discriminating against asylum-seekers. According to The Los Angeles Times, detention in the Deep South carries its own set of problems—detention centers are often isolated, with scant access to lawyers and no opportunity for inmates to obtain parole.In a statement published on its website, the SPLC claims that asylum-seekers have followed legal procedures to gain entry into the United States but are now being denied fundamental rights.“Like hundreds of people being held in multiple ICE detention centers in the Deep South, our asylum-seeking plaintiffs are being punished for following the law,” said SPLC Senior Supervising Attorney Luz Virginia Lopez. “They followed the legal checklist by first presenting themselves at a point of entry, and this is how America is paying them back—with cruelty and disrespect for the law.”Furthermore, the SPLC claims that parole approvals are hitting new lows under the direction of President Donald Trump. Last year—out of 130 asylum-seekers to petition for parole in one Immigration and Customs Enforcement district—only two individuals won conditional release.Parole statistics in ICE’s New Orleans field district are particularly bad. In 2016, 75% of parole requests were approved—in 2018, that figure had plummeted to 1.5%.Southern Poverty Law Center staff attorney Laura Rivera said ICE’s decision to ship detainees South likely isn’t without motive.“When ICE makes strategic decisions about where to ship hundreds of asylum seekers, it has to know the Louisiana field office is not granting relief on parole to anybody,” Rivera said.Rivera also echoed contemporary wisdom on incarceration, arguing that keeping people behind bars does little good for anyone.“Across this nation, there is consensus building that incarceration does much more harm than good to our communities,” she said. “Yet, as criminal justice reform leads to lower rates of incarceration, this administration is filling jails and prisons with record numbers of migrants—more than 53,000 at last count. It’s causing untold human suffering, and it’s violating the law.”River and the SPLC’s complaint notes that, along with potentially breaking the law, refusing parole to asylum-seekers costs American taxpayers a lot of money.
A 2014 image of Donald Trump. President Trump has continued to make immigration a central platform for his presidency. Image from Flickr via Wikimedia Commons/user:Gage Skidmore. (CCA-BY-2.0).
Sources
ASYLUM SEEKERS LEFT 'LANGUISHING IN IMMIGRATION PRISONS' SUING TRUMP ADMINISTRATION FOR 'CATEGORICALLY DENYING RELEASE'Asylum seekers locked up in the Deep South sue ICE in a bid for paroleSPLC lawsuit: ICE illegally denying parole to asylum seekers in Southeast
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.