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From CNN
(CNN)The husband of a US Army soldier killed in combat was detained and deported to Mexico last week by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement even though he had been granted permission to stay in the US, according to his attorney.
The man, who is now back in Phoenix, where he lives, had been granted "parole in place," clearing him to remain in the US after his wife was killed in 2010 in Afghanistan, the attorney says.
Jose Gonzalez Carranza was arrested by ICE agents at his home in Phoenix on April 8 and was taken to Nogales, Mexico, on the border two days later, his lawyer, Ezequiel Hernandez, told CNN on Monday. Carranza was brought back to Phoenix and released Monday, hours after his deportation was first reported by The Arizona Republic.
Hernandez said that his law firm tried to contact ICE for details related to why Gonzalez was taken back to Mexico but did not receive a response until after his office notified the press.
COMMENT:-
This is an absolutely perfect and highly cost effective way of dealing with the issue. Simply don't tell people when you have scheduled a hearing into their case and then deport them on the absolutely incontrovertible evidence that they "failed to attend a scheduled hearing".
For those who want to quibble about "due process" simply amend the administrative requirements so that the procedural requirement for "notice" than specifies "Notice of all hearings shall be posted in the basement of the no longer used courthouse in East Nowhere, AL." and there is then no longer any claim that "due process" requirements for "notice" were not met.
And, of course, once the person has been removed from the country they no longer have an active claim so their case can be dismissed and closed.
And, of course, if the person makes another claim, that claim can be dismissed on the grounds that "This claim is identical to a prior claim that was dismissed."
ICE deported the husband of a soldier killed in combat even though he had been cleared to stay in US
(CNN)The husband of a US Army soldier killed in combat was detained and deported to Mexico last week by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement even though he had been granted permission to stay in the US, according to his attorney.
The man, who is now back in Phoenix, where he lives, had been granted "parole in place," clearing him to remain in the US after his wife was killed in 2010 in Afghanistan, the attorney says.
Jose Gonzalez Carranza was arrested by ICE agents at his home in Phoenix on April 8 and was taken to Nogales, Mexico, on the border two days later, his lawyer, Ezequiel Hernandez, told CNN on Monday. Carranza was brought back to Phoenix and released Monday, hours after his deportation was first reported by The Arizona Republic.
Hernandez said that his law firm tried to contact ICE for details related to why Gonzalez was taken back to Mexico but did not receive a response until after his office notified the press.
COMMENT:-
This is an absolutely perfect and highly cost effective way of dealing with the issue. Simply don't tell people when you have scheduled a hearing into their case and then deport them on the absolutely incontrovertible evidence that they "failed to attend a scheduled hearing".
For those who want to quibble about "due process" simply amend the administrative requirements so that the procedural requirement for "notice" than specifies "Notice of all hearings shall be posted in the basement of the no longer used courthouse in East Nowhere, AL." and there is then no longer any claim that "due process" requirements for "notice" were not met.
And, of course, once the person has been removed from the country they no longer have an active claim so their case can be dismissed and closed.
And, of course, if the person makes another claim, that claim can be dismissed on the grounds that "This claim is identical to a prior claim that was dismissed."