Los Angeles Times
By David Zucchino
March 19, 2015
A
Federal judge threatened Thursday to sanction the Justice Department if
he finds that government lawyers misled him about the rollout of
President Obama’s plan to shield
up to 5 million people from deportation.
U.S.
District Judge Andrew S. Hanen, visibly annoyed, confronted a U.S.
deputy assistant attorney general over previous government assurances on
the timing of the program.
He
asked why he shouldn’t grant a discovery request for internal federal
immigration documents — a request filed Thursday by 26 states that are
suing over Obama’s executive
actions on immigration.
Hanen
ordered a freeze on the Obama plan on Feb. 16 in response to the
lawsuit, which accuses the administration of overstepping the
president’s authority.
At
a one-hour hearing in Brownsville, Hanen gave the Justice Department 48
hours to file a motion in response. He said he would then rule promptly
on whether to require
the government to produce documents concerning applications under
Obama’s deferred action program.
The judge said that if he decided to impose sanctions, “the taxpayers of the [26] states would end up paying their own damages.”
Hanen’s
barbed comments left little doubt that he sympathized with lawyers for
the 26 states, who said they suffered “irreparable harm” when federal
officials granted
more than 100,000 applications for deferred action after Obama
announced the program Nov. 20. He said government lawyers had assured
him that “nothing was happening” regarding the applications.
The
outcome of the hearing further delayed the administration’s attempts to
resolve the court case and proceed with the immigration program during
his last two years in
office. The program, one of the president’s signature initiatives, is
opposed by Republicans, who control legislatures in most of the 26
states suing, led by Texas.
Hanen
said Justice Department lawyers had assured him at a previous hearing
that the administration had not begun implementing the deferred-action
plan, designed to protect
qualified immigrants from deportation for three years.
“Like the judge, the states thought nothing was happening,” Hanen said with exasperation. “Like an idiot, I believed that.”
Deputy
Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. Kathleen R. Hartnett told the judge: “I would
like to apologize for any confusion.” She added moments later: “We had
no intent to withhold
any of this material from the court.”
Hartnett
said lawyers immediately notified the court when they realized “we may
have inadvertently caused confusion.” Hanen corrected her, asking, “So
you waited three
weeks to tell me you were doing it?”
Hartnett
said there had been confusion within the federal government over
applications under Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA,
instituted in 2012, and Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, or DAPA, announced in November.
The
DAPA executive action included expanded deferred action for qualified
DACA applicants, from a two-year reprieve to three years. Government
lawyers believed original
applications under DACA were not covered by the lawsuit, Hartnett told
the judge.
More
than 94,000 of the 108,000 applications for three-year reprieves
granted since November were originally submitted before Obama’s Nov. 20
executive action, she said.
But the judge appeared unconvinced, saying the three-year reprieves were covered by the lawsuit.
When
Hanen asked Hartnett whether American taxpayers would ultimately pay
for any sanctions imposed on the Justice Department, she offered a
noncommittal response.
“Answer my question,” the judge demanded.
“Ultimately, yes,” Hartnett responded.
Angela
Colmenero, a lawyer for Texas and 25 other states, said she understood
“that this is a big, complex federal program.” But she said the states
needed to rely on
“additional documents and not just the words” of Justice Department
lawyers.
Colmenero
said the department did not inform the court of the 108,000 approvals
until 15 days after Hanen issued an injunction halting the immigration
program. “The plaintiffs
were more than surprised by this disclosure,” she said.
Granting
the deferred action applications made it less likely that undocumented
immigrants would leave the U.S. while encouraging other immigrants to
enter the illegally,
Colmenero said. Now that the applications have been granted, she said,
it is “virtually impossible to unscramble the egg.’’
Hanen
asked Hartnett bluntly whether Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson
or other senior officials could be trusted on the immigration plan.
“I can trust what Secretary Johnson says … what President Obama says?” the judge asked.
“Yes, your honor, of course,” Hartnett replied.
Obama’s
plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5
million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, DAPA,
would offer three-year
work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would
not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal
records.
DAPA
would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United
States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or
legal permanent residents.
Obama
said in November that he would issue the same protections to a group of
immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s DACA
program. About 300,000
more people would qualify under the expanded eligibility rules. That
program, the president said, was simply an extension of his authority to
prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no
practical way to deport all 11 million people
living in the U.S. illegally.
The
Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin
accepting applications from people eligible for the expanded DACA
reprieve starting Feb. 18. However,
the department also said the change from two years of protection to
three years would take effect before that.
Hanen, referring to his issuing of the injunction on Feb. 16, told Hartnett: “I was trying to meet the deadline you set.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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