Ammiano condemns SCOTUS’ upholding Arizona’s “show me your papers” provision, urges Gov. Brown, AG. Harris to ensure California becomes antidote to Arizona with TRUST Act

June 25, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEJune 25, 2012

Sacramento - In response to the US Supreme Court ruling in the case of Arizona v. United States, Assemblymember Tom Ammiano, (D-SF) and author of California’s TRUST Act (AB 1081), issued the following statement:

While I am relieved the Supreme Court struck down portions of Arizona’s discriminatory law, it is heartbreaking that the most odious provision, the “show me your papers” section (2B), still stands. This should be called the “racial profiling” provision given the painful impact it will have.

With today’s ruling, the court has further legitimized the destructive practice of local police serving as an extension of our broken immigration system. This plunges millions of our friends, neighbors, and family members across the country into greater risk of separation from their loved ones.

But ironically, the damage was in many ways already done – by the federal “Secure” Communities or S-comm deportation program.

S-Comm has burdened our local governments and put even victims and witnesses of crime at risk of deportation, making us all less safe. It has even mistakenly trapped US citizens in our local jails for immigration purposes.

California’s TRUST Act would limit the unjust and onerous detentions for deportation in our local jails of community members who pose no threat to public safety. To ensure that our state does not become another Arizona, I respectfully urge Governor Jerry Brown and Attorney General Kamala Harris to support the bill.

Statements from the sponsors of the TRUST Act follow. The bill is supported by a broad coalition of organizations and elected officials from across the state.

Pablo Alvarado, Executive Director, National Day Laborer Organizing Network: “The fact that the court could not tell whether on its face section 2(b) conflicts with federal policy means federal policy (i.e. S-Comm) is far too similar to Arizona policy. But it doesn’t have to be that way in California.”

Reshma Shamasunder, Executive Director, California Immigrant Policy Center: “With its decision on the provision that encourages racial profiling, the Supreme Court has effectively turned back the clock on our hard-won civil rights protections. In the wake of this bad ruling, California lawmakers must lead the nation in moving forward once again, by passing the TRUST Act as soon as possible.”

Angela Chan, senior staff attorney, Asian Law Caucus: ”The Trust Act will assist local police in rebuilding trust with Asian, Latino, and many other immigrant communities who are fearful of reporting crime because of S-Comm’s broad deportation dragnet.”

Background: The Arizona law, passed in April 2010, drew widespread condemnation because it would have forced local police to act as immigration agents and unleashed a wave of profiling based on appearance and accent. Immigrant advocates said the program would entangle police in what is an essentially broken immigration system.

At the heart of the similarity between S-Comm and SB 1070 is the fact that under S-Comm, the fingerprints of everyone arrested – even survivors of domestic violence arrested with their abusers – are automatically sent to ICE. Immigration officials then pressure local governments to hold immigrant community members in jail for extra time, at local expense, so that ICE can pick up the individuals for deportation. However, these “hold” requests are voluntary and a number of jurisdictions have already chosen to limit how they respond.

Nearly 7 in 10 of the 72,000 Californians deported either had no convictions or were brought in for minor offenses.

The TRUST Act passed the state Senate Public Safety committee 5-2 on June 12, 2012, and now heads to the Senate floor. The bill sets a minimum standard for local governments not to submit to ICE’s requests to detain people for deportation unless the individual has a serious or violent felony conviction and guards against profiling and wrongful detention of citizens and crime victims.

In an editorial published June 22, the New York Times endorsed the TRUST Act, stating: “The bill would enhance the ability of local departments to fight crime by restoring community trust and saving jail space for serious offenders. It deserves to become law.”


Close To 1 Million Dreams Protected, 10.5 Million Dreams To Go

June 19, 2012

By Ju Hong, member of ASPIRE (Asian Students Promoting Immigrant Rights through Education)

Although I recently graduated from UC Berkeley with a major in Political Science, I am unable to use my degree to work because I am undocumented. Not only did I face a difficult time to finding ways to work, I also faced constant fear of deportation – until President Obama made an announcement last Friday to stop deportation and provide work permits to a selected group of DREAMers who meet requirements under a new immigration policy.

This historic announcement would not have been possible without the courageous DREAMers who stood up and shared their stories, held events and rallies, contacted elected officials, and led hunger strikes and civil disobedience actions despite risking deportation. After many years of collaborative efforts to demand for justice and equality, the federal government finally made a move to provide a very limited and temporary relief for many undocumented young people in this country.

For many years, I have lived in fear: The fear of facing deportation and of permanently leaving the country I called home; the fear of being separated from my friends, my family, and my community; the fear of not being accepted within my own community; the fear of contacting the police at a time of need; and the fear of losing my hope and dreams in graduating from college. Today, I feel liberated from these fears. Because of this announcement, I can better focus on preparing for my master’s degree program, provide for my family, and continue to advocate for the federal DREAM Act and Comprehensive Immigration Reform.

Prior to June 15, 2012, I was unable to get a job, apply for internships, or qualify for financial aid. Thus, I had to work more than thirty hours of week at a Japanese restaurant, mopping floors and washing dishes, getting paid below minimum wage under the table, while I commuted to school and enrolled as a full-time student at Laney College, Oakland. Sometimes I had to stay up all night to apply for limited scholarship opportunities to meet the deadlines. Today, I feel free from these obstacles. Because of this announcement, I will have open doors of new opportunities to use my degree to work and contribute back to society. Not only will I have the chance to work to support my schoolwork, but also I have capacity to support my family.  Like one of my fellow DREAMers said, “I feel I am normal again.”

With this announcement, an approximate 800,000 young peoples’ dreams are now protected, at least temporarily. This is huge victory for the undocumented community, but the fight is not over. There are thousands of other young DREAMers who are not eligible to apply for deferred action or work permits because of strict requirements under this announcement. For example, DREAMers who are over 30 years old cannot qualify to receive deferred action or work permits. Moving forward, we must stay involved and work with the Obama’s administration to include all DREAMers because they also have the right to DREAM.

Finally, we must continue to fight for the federal DREAM Act and Comprehensive Immigration Reform because this announcement is only a temporary solution. Now more than ever, we have strength, conviction, and power in our hands to organize, mobilize, and take collective actions to solve our broken immigration system. Soon, we will fulfill all the 11.5 million dreams.


State Senate Committee approves bill to counteract disgraced “S-Comm’ deportation program

June 14, 2012

TRUST Act would ease burden on local governments of controversial program which has deported 72,694 Californians

SACRAMENTO – On June 12th, 2012, by a vote of 5 to 2, the California State Senate’s Public Safety Committee approved the new version of the TRUST Act (AB 1081 – Ammiano). The bill would reform California’s participation in the discredited “Secure” Communities deportation program – which has faced severe criticism for undermining public safety and burdening local governments – by limiting the unfair, extended detention of immigrants in local jails for deportation. Details are available below. The bill now heads to the Senate Appropriations Committee for consideration.

The committee heard powerful testimony from Blanca Perez, a Los Angeles mother facing deportation due to an arrest last year for selling ice cream on the street who urged the state to set an example for the rest of the country with the passage of the bill. “Immigrants in Alabama and Arizona are afraid today, but as my experience tells us, immigrants in Los Angeles, here in Sacramento and even in San Francisco, have reason to be afraid as well,” Ms. Perez told the committee.

“Blanca’s story confirms that ICE’s priorities are stunningly out-of-whack,” said Assemblymember Tom Ammiano. “This is something I’d expect in Arizona, not in Los Angeles. Persecuting this courageous, hard-working mom for selling ice cream on the street is a ridiculous waste of resources. Today’s vote recognizes that S-Comm is sabotaging our public safety. The TRUST Act is the solution we need to begin rebuilding the confidence that our local law enforcement worked so hard to build, but that ICE has shattered.”

Tuesday’s decision comes as the Supreme Court continues to mull Arizona’s anti-immigrant SB 1070, which like the controversial S-Comm program entangles local police in federal immigration enforcement. To create a “bright line” between local police and ICE, the TRUST Act would:

  • Set a minimum standard for local governments not to submit to ICE’s requests to detain people for deportation unless the individual has a serious or violent felony conviction.
  • Guard against profiling and wrongful detention of citizens and crime victims and witnesses. Localities that detain individuals with serious convictions for deportation would develop common-sense plans to prevent profiling and wrongful detentions.

Last year, a report by UC Berkeley’s Warren Institute estimated that nationwide, some 3,600 US Citizens were apprehended by ICE due to S-Comm since the program’s start and also found S-Comm was disproportionately targeting Latinos.

Under the program, the fingerprints of everyone arrested – even survivors of domestic violence arrested with their abusers – are automatically sent to ICE. Immigration officials then pressure local governments to hold immigrant community members in jail for extra time, at local expense, so that ICE can pick up the individuals for deportation. However, these “hold” requests are clearly voluntary under federal law.

The vote falls one week after Washington, DC became the latest in a string of local governments across the country to adopt policies similar to the TRUST Act and also comes days after the California Catholic Conference – which consists of all ten of the state’s Catholic Bishops – publicly announced its strong support for the bill.

Over one hundred community members from around the state attended today’s hearing in support of the bill.

About the TRUST Act: In 2011, the first version of the bill passed both the California Assembly (47-26) and the Senate Public Safety Committee (5-2). The bill originally sought to modify California’s agreement with the federal government over S-Comm to curb the program’s well-documented abuses. However, in a stunning display of bad faith, ICE shredded all state agreements last year, but claimed states still needed to send fingerprints. ICE’s surprise maneuver spurred a months-long process of consultation with groups across the state, resulting in the focus on ICE’s burdensome “hold” requests.


Obstacles to the Ballot Persist for Some Voters

June 11, 2012

Note: Originally published on New America Media on Jun 08, 2012 . This article has been re-posted with the permission of the author.

By Carolyn Hsu, Voting Rights Fellow at Asian Law Caucus

Our country’s civil rights laws strongly protect equal access to the vote for all citizens, but even today, this promise is still unmet. On Tuesday, June 5, the Asian Law Caucus (ALC) monitored poll sites throughout northern California to ensure that Asian American voters had full access to the ballot. What we found were a number of deficiencies at polling places across Alameda County that made it more difficult for voters, especially those still learning English, to cast a ballot.

According to the U.S. Census, one in three Asian Americans does not speak English very well, so language is one of the strongest barriers preventing our community from voting. When language assistance is provided, all citizens can meaningfully participate in the electoral process and have a voice on the important issues that affect their lives. Additionally, language assistance helps communities integrate immigrants into civic life. For these reasons, Congress enacted Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act.

That section requires jurisdictions to provide language assistance if the number of eligible voters qualifying for such assistance meets certain threshold numbers, as determined by the Census Bureau. That language assistance must be provided both before and on Election Day, and it includes bilingual assistance at poll sites and such translated written materials as voter information guides, ballots and signage. Alameda County is required to provide bilingual voting assistance in Chinese, Spanish, Tagalog and Vietnamese.

ALC trained poll monitors to observe elections operations in areas with high concentrations of voters who do not speak English very well. They found that a number of poll sites throughout Alameda County failed to display voting materials in the required languages. There was also inadequate signage indicating that bilingual assistance was even available in the first place.

Additionally, Alameda County experienced difficulty recruiting a sufficient number of bilingual speakers to assist voters at the polls on Election Day. The county is currently required to comply with specific instructions in carrying out its language assistance plans after the Department of Justice (DOJ) sued Alameda County, alleging that it failed to provide effective access to the electoral process for Spanish and Chinese-speaking citizens. The parties entered a consent decree, which required that Alameda County provide almost 720 Chinese bilingual workers at poll sites throughout the county on Tuesday. By Election Day, the county was not able to secure that requisite number.

In preparation for the November elections, the Registrar will again begin convening Language Advisory Committee meetings. Throughout the next several months, individuals from the community can attend these meetings to provide advice and assistance to the Registrar so it can better prepare to meet the language assistance needs of our community for future elections.

ALC will again conduct poll monitoring during the November 2012 elections, and is working in partnership with its affiliates at the Asian American Center for Advancing Justice to conduct this voter protection project throughout the country. The effort in northern California is made possible by the assistance of the Filipino Advocates for Justice (Union City), Family Bridges (Oakland), Lao Family Community Development (Oakland), and Asian Resources (Sacramento).

The Bay Area is home to over 1.5 million Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. Counties like Alameda have a vested interest in ensuring that all its citizens, regardless of language proficiency, have the means to exercise their right to vote. Our democracy is at its strongest when we seek to enfranchise as many eligible citizens as possible. In November, many new Americans will vote for a president for the first time not just in this country but perhaps in their lives. Let’s make sure that every voice gets a chance to be heard.


“New Americans in California”: The #s on Our Growing Numbers

February 2, 2012

By Jenalyn Sotto, Communications Intern at the Asian Law Caucus

For longer than recent memory, every decade brings with it a plethora of changes: (r)evolutionary fashion trends, a series of technological advances, two (and a half) presidential terms, three Olypmic games, and the U.S. Census. The U.S. Census Bureau’s Facebook Page lauds itself as “[the] trusted source for quality statistics about people, places and our economy.” While its scope of information collecting remains unparalleled in its field–save for perhaps the State Government Tax Collections–rarely does the ordinary U.S. person (resident or citizen) see more of the U.S. Census’ data than the small, or sometimes lengthy, questionnaire during data-collecting.

But during this election year, where the stakes are even higher for under-represented communities, it is vital that we know and acknowledge changing demographics.  The Immigration Policy Center released a detailed set of infographics on Latino and Asian immigrant populations taken from–you got it!–the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2010 Census. Updated from the released data and special reports from the 2010 Census and the 2010 American Communities Survey and re-released with state-specific infographics for distribution, the study entitled “STRENGTH IN DIVERSITY: The Economic and Political Clout of Immigrants, Latinos, and Asians in the United States” serves to breakdown, demystify, and debunk popular tropes about the growing immigrant populations with specific emphases on the Latina/o and Asian populations through numbers. Referred to as “New Americans,” the study enumerates the national and state-by-state economic and political growth of foreign-born naturalized Latina/o and Asian Americans as well as their native-born children.

For California:

California’s New American population is robust and makes California robust.

  • More than 1/4th of Californians are immigrants. *
  • More than 1/2 of Californians are Latina/o or Asian–and they vote. *
  • Immigrant workers, entrepreneurs, and taxpayers are integral to California’s economy. *
  • Immigrant, Latina/o, and Asian entrepreneurs and consumers add hundreds of billions of dollars and more than a million jobs to California’s economy. *
  • Most native-born Californians have experienced a wage gain from immigration. *

Therefore, California policies sensitive to the Latina/o and Asian populations should be considered with great legislative and community, grassroots care. Over half of the state identifies as Latina/o or Asian! But, as made evident by campaigns past and present, diversity in these groups causes mobilization difficulties. The issues of immigration policing in California alone makes heads spin–what more when it comes to small and medium business tax reform, redistricting, voting rights, language access, healthcare, education, public health and safety, and government representation?

This California infographic–and all other state infographics–is the proverbial tip of the iceberg, only going so far to as to whet your appetite by leaving that almost insatiable craving for clarification, qualification, and denouement. This offering by the Immigration Policy Center should serve as a first course for the type of awareness and data collection that our community organizations, legislators, and local officials should enact in order to better cater to the growing New American populations. Even more important, New Americans should become better versed in their numbers in order to harness that salient power. The national discourse has been long dominated by the see-saw of ambivalence and disfavor (heavy on the disfavor) towards immigrants and their progeny, but with the American imaginary increasingly interchanging “immigrant” with Asian or Latina/o it is high time for our communities to seize the day(ta) and make ourselves well and truly known.

*: These statements were taken from the Immigration Policy Center’s The Political and Economic Power of Immigrants, Latinos, and Asians in the Golden State (Updated January 2012).


Celebrating Civil Rights: Korematsu Day events in the Bay Area and at the Smithsonian

January 27, 2012

By Jenalyn Sotto, Communications Intern at the Asian Law Caucus

This coming Monday, January 30th California will celebrate its 2nd annual Fred Korematsu Day in commemoration of the struggle for justice our Japanese American community faced during and after WWII. With the specter of 9/11 haunting our Middle Eastern, Arab, and South Asian American communities in ways similarly faced by the Japanese American community following the 1941 bombing of Pearl Harbor, Fred Korematsu Day stands as a reminder of the need for vigilance in protecting civil rights. American citizens and residents should not have to incur dramatic alterations to self–like eyelids or surnames–just to fit in, avoid surveillance, or–more drastically–evade unwarranted and indefinite detention for crimes one had nothing to do with. Korematsu Day is a reminder that racailization is an invalid means of ensuring national security when it is one’s own nationals being targeted. And while in the U.S., that might seem ambiguous, just peruse the “The Struggle for Justice” website for a fuller perspective on how racialization operates against the tenets of life, liberty, and the American Bill of Rights.

While Korematsu Day is a California state holiday, across the nation in Washington, D.C., the Smithsonian now includes the civil rights activism Fred Korematsu and his team of pro-bono attorneys stood for. The first Asian American in the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery Civil Rights Exhibition, the work and message of Korematsu Day represents the first of many steps necessary to achieving social justice in the United States.   Below are links to the Korematsu Institute press release on the unveiling of the Fred Korematsu installations at the “The Struggle for Justice” exhibit as well as a link to other Korematsu Day events throughout the Bay Area:

1. Press Release: “Fred Korematsu Becomes First Asian American in the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery Civil Rights Exhibition

2. Korematsu Day Events in the Bay Area: Fred Korematsu Institute for Civil Rights and Education: Fred Korematsu Day Events


Trashing Transparency

December 19, 2011

NOTE: Originally published on the ACLU’s  Blog of Rights on December 19, 2011. This article has been re-posted with the permission of the author.

By Nasrina Bargzie, Staff Attorney at the Asian Law Caucus

In November 2005, U.S. marines in Iraq were involved in the killing of 24 civilians—including women and children. Shortly after the story became public, the ACLU filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for all documents related to the incident and other civilian casualties of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Although we received thousands of documents in response, the government did not give us a single document relating specifically to the killings at Haditha.

Apparently, it threw them away instead.

Last week, The New York Times reported that it had found hundreds of pages of records relating to the horrific incident in Haditha . . . in a junkyard, being burned as kindling to cook a dinner.

The U.S. government could have turned these documents over and, in the process, helped Americans obtain the information they need in order to critically reflect on our conduct in Iraq and other theaters of war. Instead it chose to trash transparency, and as a result, strangle any chance of proper accountability.

The documents discovered by The New York Times reflect a disillusioned and tragically misdirected mission that resulted in death and suffering in Iraq and among the Marines themselves. Ironically, the military’s attempt to fog the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has worked doubly against the interests of the American people. First, the American public was denied access to records reflecting its government’s conduct for years. Second, its servicepersons were forced to operate in an environment where the death of innocent civilians was considered a “cost of doing business,” resulting in severe damage to the servicepersons themselves.

These documents should have been made public. Throwing away documents relating to atrocities in Iraq will not make those atrocities go away. Instead, it only breeds distrust in our government and deprives us of the information we need as citizens to hold our leaders accountable and to make informed choices about our policies.


Post-9/11, A Decade Later: Keeping Immigrants Out

September 9, 2011

NOTE: Originally published at the Immigration Symposium at Penn State Law School on September 16, 2011. This article has been re-posted with the permission of the author.

By Sin Yen Ling, Senior Staff Attorney at the Asian Law Caucus

On May 1, 2011, major television stations interrupted the evening with the announcement that Osama Bin Laden was dead.  President Obama went live at 11:00 p.m. pacific standard time.  As the details trickled in, I felt an immediate rush of emotions: grief, sadness, and anguish.  Memories came rushing back to me.  I remembered where I was when the World Trade Center came down that morning.  I remembered the immediate days after 9.11 when I was triaging emails and phone calls at the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (“AALDEF”) concerning hate incidents targeting Sikhs in New York City and around the country.  I remembered the hundreds of South Asian, Arab and Muslim men I represented in immigration detention months and years after September 11th.  While the memories seemed so long ago, on the night of May 1st, the memories came back like it had all happened yesterday.

In the immediate aftermath of 9.11, the Bush Administration implemented policies such as secret detention, special registration and the absconder initiative, specifically, targeting South Asian, Arab and Muslim communities.  On September 21, 2001, Chief Immigration Judge Michael Creppy issued a memorandum ordering all courts to be closed and to adhere to secret procedures when an immigrant detainee is labeled as “special interest.”  In August 2002, the call-in registration portion of the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (“NSEERS”) mandated that certain men (and boys over 16) from twenty-five predominantly Muslim countries and North Korea were required to report to local immigration offices between November 2002 and April 2003.  At the conclusion of the special registration program, 82,581 individuals nationwide had been questioned, fingerprinted and interrogated under oath. These blanket policies were intended to racially profile these communities, indefinitely detain them pending terrorism investigations based solely on race and religion and then deport them back to their home countries without ever charging them with terrorism.   There is no question as to the racial and religious overtones of these policies.  At AALDEF, in New York City, I represented many of these individuals from 2001 to 2005.  These individuals were predominantly male, 16-45 years, and recent immigrants from South Asian, Arab and Muslim countries.

Throughout this decade, many of these post 9.11 policies have reached beyond the racial scope of the South Asian, Arab and Muslim diaspora.  The threat of another 9.11 has become a reason to expand these policies to exclude all immigrants, regardless of their race and religion.  It was no longer just about race and religion, but about national origin.  Many of these policies are now aimed at preventing noncitizens from obtaining immigration status including political asylum and lawful permanent residency by alleging that these individuals engaged in “material support to terrorism.”  These same allegations were used to prevent individuals from immigrating to the United States to join their families or to work or attend conferences in the U.S.  Other remnants of post 9.11, called the FBI “Name Check” delayed applications for citizenship because of a “hit” using some variation of their names.   Communities impacted by these policies expanded to include Asians, Latinos, Eastern Europeans, Russians, and Africans.  While the earlier policies worked towards ferreting out individuals based on their race and religion, later policies aimed at excluding individuals and keeping them out of the country because they were not American citizens.

After four years of post 9.11 cases, I was burnt out and exhausted.  I moved to San Francisco, California hoping to take a break from these cases to focus on broader immigrants’ rights issue.  To my surprise, I found that it was impossible to avoid these issues because the post 9.11 policies became deeply entrenched in the immigration system. Since 2006, I have been working at the Asian Law Caucus, the first civil rights organization serving the Asian Pacific American community.  At the Caucus, my work ranges from representing immigrants facing deportation while in ICE custody to affirmative litigation in the SB1070 cases in the South, ie., Georgia and Alabama.

On July 2, 2007, the Asian Law Caucus, along with the American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”), ACLU of Northern California and Council for American Islamic Relations, brought a lawsuit in the Northern District of California challenging the FBI “Name Check” process as applied to the naturalization process.  Lawful permanent residents eligible to become a citizen must file an N-400 application.  U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) runs each of these applications against a number of databases including the FBI “name check.”  In response to 9.11, the FBI “name check” was expanded to include not only the FBI’s “main files” but also “references.”  Applicants’ names register a “hit” if they were merely a witness or victim of a crime, if they had assisted with the FBI with an investigation, or if they had undergone an employment-related security clearance in the past.  The name checks also turn up a high number of false positives because they use alternate permutations of applicants’ names.  If there is a “hit,” CIS will not continue to process a naturalization application even when the law required that an adjudication be made within 120 days of an examination. By May 2008, the number of pending citizenship cases had ballooned up to 329,000 cases, with 64 percent of these cases stalled for more than 90 days.

In Ahmadi v. Chertoff, our class plaintiffs came from countries including China (including Hong Kong), India, Pakistan, Russia, Canada, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, and Afghanistan.  At the Asian Law Caucus, we received over 300 intakes involving naturalization delays due to the FBI name check, with a disproportionate impact on the Chinese, Russian and Muslim communities.  The expansion of the FBI “name check” after 9.11 was intended to exclude as many noncitizens from obtaining the rights and benefits of citizenship which includes the right to vote, the right to file visa petitions for immediate family members, and the right to federal benefits.  Ahmadi v. Chertoff settled in 2008 as did most of the class action lawsuits filed in response to the FBI “name check.”

On January 25, 2002, the Department of Justice issued the Absconder Initiative Memorandum which outlined the goal of identifying, apprehending and deporting individuals with final orders of removal.  Individuals arrested under the Absconder Initiative in the months following 9.11 were predominantly Muslims.  By 2008, 33,997 noncitizens were detained as part of the Fugitive Operations Apprehensions which morphed from the Alien Absconder Initiative initially targeting terrorists.  Ten years ago, I only represented Muslims who were arrested under the fugitive operations initiative.  Today, in California, there isn’t a week that passes where I do not receive a phone call involving a fugitive operations case except the person is no longer Muslim, but Asian and/or Latino.  The most notable fugitive operations case I recently handled involved the arrest of Steve Li, a Peruvian Chinese DREAM Act student whose case garnered national attention.  He was 12-years old when he came to the United States.  He was 15-years old when he was ordered removed by the Board of Immigration Appeals.  He was 20-years old and studying at City College of San Francisco when ICE raided his home and arrested him.  He was involuntarily transferred to the Florence Detention Center in Arizona and detained for approximately three months before California Senator Dianne Feinstein intervened with a private immigration bill. Illinois Senator Dick Durbin cited Steve’s case when he reintroduced the DREAM Act on May 11, 2011.  Steve is not South Asian, Arab or Muslim, nor is he a terrorist or has never engaged in terrorist activities.

Today’s post 9.11 policies aim at preventing Muslims from entering the country even if they were properly petitioned by family members and then granted an immigrant visa.  In February 2010, the Asian Law Caucus filed a complaint with the Northern District of California on behalf of Fauzia Din, a U.S. Citizen and Afghani national, who petitioned her husband, an Afghani citizen.  Fauzia’s husband was employed as a government clerk in the Afghan Ministry of Education since 2003. His job duties involved processing paperwork and other low-level administrative duties.  From 1992 to 2003, he worked as a payroll clerk in the Afghan Ministry of Social Welfare, where he processed payroll for school teachers and performed other low-level administrative duties.  From 1996-2001, during the Taliban occupation of Afghanistan, he continued to work in the Ministry of Social Welfare in the same capacity as before, and after, the Taliban occupation.  During the Taliban occupation of Afghanistan, he never implemented any policy changes on the Taliban’s behalf.

In 2006, Fauzia filed an I-130 Petition for Alien Relative for her husband and it was approved on 2008.  On July 13, 2009, the American Embassy denied the visa petition under INA § 212(a)(3)(B), a provision of the Act applicable to “terrorist activities.”  However, the Government never explained what the terrorist activities involved.  Under consular process rules, a consulate decision to issue or withhold a visa is not subject to either administrative or judicial review unless the denial of the visa implicates the constitutional rights of American citizens.  Our lawsuit argued that the consular officer’s denial of her immigrant visa petition on behalf of her husband violated her constitutional right to due process.  The case is currently before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.  Fauzia has been separated from her husband for the past five years.

Similarly, in 2009, the Asian Law Caucus represented the family member of Umar Hayat.  Hayat is best known for his association with the Lodi Terrorism Case.  Umar Hayat, an ice cream truck driver, and his son, Hamid Hayat were arrested in 2006 when an informant provided bad intelligence claiming that Osama Bin Laden’s deputy, Ayman Al Zawahiri, had visited Lodi, California.  Later, this intelligence turned out to be false.  The Government dropped charges against Umar Hayat, but his son was sentenced to 24 years in prison for attending a training camp in Pakistan.  In 2009, Mr. Hayat’s relative was granted an immigrant visa based on his U.S. Citizen wife’s visa petition. He interviewed at the American Embassy in Islamabad and consular processed with a visa issued on September 2009.  Mid-air through his travels and before he arrived at the San Francisco International Airport (“SFO”), the Government revoked his visa without explanation and instead, paroled him into the United States.  He was detained at SFO for approximately five hours. He was allowed to enter the U.S. through the parole status, but was not considered to have been admitted for the purposes of immigration laws.  About three months later, he was given an appointment to return to Borders and Customs expecting that he would be issued a Notice to Appear and be allowed to appear before an Immigration Judge.   Instead, he was interrogated for several hours, arrested, detained and expeditiously removed after hours of interrogation.  As his counsel, I was not allowed to represent my client and was kicked out of the interview when I asked to speak with my client privately when he was asked whether he feared returning to Pakistan.  A frail, old, diabetic man who requires insulin shots was hauled off to a local county jail before he was put on a plane back to Pakistan.  It was clear that Mr. Hayat’s relative was paroled into the U.S. only for the purposes of gathering intelligence.  As soon as they obtained information, they deported him from the United States.

On the night of May 1st, we all watched images broadcast from outside the White House and near Ground Zero in New York City.  We watched hordes of young people, mostly college students, celebrating in jubilation and extreme jingoism.  These are the children of 9.11 — young people who were only 8-10 years old and are now in their late teens and early 20’s.  They grew up with catch phrases like “war on terrorism” and “weapons of mass destruction.”   The celebrations in front of the White House were seen and heard around the world.  These disturbing images reflect on all Americans and the fact that we have not progressed in the past decade.  In spite of the great work of lawyers and advocates immediately after 9.11, we have failed to learn and reflect from lessons of the past, times like Japanese American internment when we forfeited people’s rights in search of a false sense of security.

On September 11th of this year, we will mark the ten year anniversary of the day that changed all of our lives, and particularly, the lives of immigrants, South Asians, Arabs and Muslims.  A new paradigm was created after 9.11 where the balance tipped in favor of creating greater power in government over the rights of the people.  It permits us to interpret the Constitution in a way that justifies the detention of individuals in Guantanamo for nearly a decade without charging them.  It refuses these men access to civilian courts so that they can be properly tried.  The new norm justifies acts of water boarding and other forms of torture, because we have convinced ourselves that the information we retrieved led to Bin Laden.  It is a paradigm that fails to question government conduct that includes illegal wiretapping and then permits the government to hide behind the doctrine of “states secrets.”  When we look at the images of the young people in front of the White House that night, sitting on trees, and celebrating like it was the Super Bowl, I am anxious at how much we are willing to give up and accept as the norm. If we do not challenge this paradigm, it will continue to be sanctioned by the courts and supported by the Obama Administration.


Undocumented and Unafraid: Steve Li

March 16, 2011

By Steve Li, ASPIRE (Asian Students Promoting Immigrant Rights through Education) Member

In honor of National Coming Out Week: Undocumented and Unafraid we are featuring stories of API dreamers.  The DREAM Act would provide undocumented students that arrived before the age of 16 in the US a pathway to legalization.

It was a sunny morning, and like any other school day, I was in the bathroom getting ready for school when there was a loud knock on the door. I didn’t want to answer it since no one ever comes that early in the morning without notice. So I woke up my mom to see if she was expecting anyone. She said no, but they kept knocking. She got up and went to answer.

That’s when five officials dressed in black rushed in and searched the apartment. I was brushing my teeth when one opened the door and told me to get out and get dressed. I kept asking what was going on, but they wouldn’t tell me anything. Finally one of the officers asked if I knew why they were here and told me that I was undocumented and they would be deporting me back to Peru.

This is the only home I remember; my goals and dreams have always been in the Bay Area. I followed their orders, thinking it was just a mistake and that I would be back at school later that day.

Outside I was searched and handcuffed. My mother was, too. I was separated from my parents, and we were taken to Sacramento and thrown into jail where I was treated like a criminal. I went to bed hungry every night, physically and mentally exhausted.

Every day I woke up thinking that I should be going to school rather than locked up 23 hours a day. I kept asking what was happening, but I couldn’t get anywhere. Immigration officers never came to the jail. The thought of being forced to leave my home and go to a country where I no longer know anyone was devastating. It was mind-boggling, not being able to turn to any one for answers.

After three weeks in Sacramento County Jail, things started to sink in, and the little hope that I had left disappeared. I was flown to Arizona, far away from my family and friends, without being able to contact anyone.

There I spent three days in a room the size of the City College cafeteria with around 200 other people. We slept on the floor in our clothes, and I could smell the sweat and body odor of everyone around me. Some, caught crossing the border, still had mud and dirt on them; others were sick, coughing vigorously. We were packed in tight, only allowed to move to go to the bathroom.

The Detention Center in Arizona, in the middle of nowhere, was surrounded by high fences with razor blades and electrical wires with cameras and security guards everywhere. I told myself this was a nightmare and I would wake up any day now. But days turned into weeks and weeks turned into months.

The stories of others in the facility, from different parts of the world, really touched me. There were many young people like me. I met someone from Guatemala who had come here with his parents when he was very young. He had no say in immigrating and was just finishing high school when Immigration and Customs Enforcement took him into custody in Los Angeles. Now he, too, expected to be sent back to a country he had no memory of.

I was lucky to be living in the Bay Area and have my community organize to bring me home, eventually convincing Senator Feinstein to introduce a private bill to stop my deportation. But there are many DREAMers who are still incarcerated in Arizona and elsewhere. We want a chance to pursue our education, a chance to use our degrees, a chance to give back to the communities we grew up in and love.

This is not a Hispanic or an Asian issue. This is an issue that affects all of us. This will happen to more and more students, friends, and neighbors. We have a broken immigration system, and we need to fix it. I don’t want other students to go through what I went through. This is why is so important to pass the Federal DREAM Act. I’m Undocumented and unafraid.


Why Asians (and Other Minorities) Must Get Involved in CA Redistricting

February 2, 2011

NOTE: Originally published on  New America Media on January 24, 2011.

This article has been re-posted with the permission of the authors.

By Eugene Lee and Deanna Kitamura, the Asian Pacific American Legal Center


LOS ANGELES—California has started a new experiment that will affect who represents you in Sacramento and Washington, D.C. Until now, the state Legislature has had the power to redraw the boundaries of state and congressional districts, a process known as redistricting. Because of recently approved ballot propositions, the Legislature’s redistricting authority has been delegated to a 14-member commission made up of California voters. The creation of the new commission presents the public with a golden opportunity to get involved in how the lines are drawn.

The commission’s job is to replace existing Assembly, state Senate, Board of Equalization and Congressional districts with new districts based on 2010 Census data. Over the last decade, some areas of the state, such as the Central Valley and the Inland Empire, have experienced significant population growth, while other areas have had stagnant growth or population losses. The commission’s task is to account for these changes and create new districts containing roughly the same number of people as other districts of the same kind. Although partisan considerations often dominate how redistricting is carried out, the population equality requirement is the reason why redistricting happens in the first place.

District boundaries drawn in the past have fragmented communities of color, including Asian-American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities. For example, in the 2001 redistricting, the San Jose neighborhood of Berryessa was split among four state Assembly districts, even though over half of Berryessa’s population is AAPI, sharing common interests and needs. When communities are divided, their ability to appeal to their elected representatives to address their needs is diminished.
By law, the commission must hold two sets of public hearings. These hearings are an opportunity for the public to educate the commission on how different communities believe the commission should draw the electoral maps. The first set of hearings is to receive input before any maps are drawn and the second set is to receive feedback following the drawing of the commission’s proposed maps.

Public input is important to the commission’s ability to keep together “communities of interest,” one of the factors the commission must consider. A community of interest is a population that shares common social and economic interests that should be kept together in order that the population’s interests are fairly and effectively represented. If divided, the community’s representation would be ineffective because it would be required to appeal to two or more elected officials, as in the case of Berryessa. Many different types of communities can make up a community of interest, such as an immigrant community with shared language-access needs, a low-income neighborhood with specific educational needs, or a geographic area where many of the residents work in the same industry.

Communities of interest are not generally labeled on maps. That’s why it is crucial that local community members come forward to educate the commission. Without public input, the commission is unlikely to know whether a specific community of interest exists and is even more unlikely to know the geographic parameters of the community of interest.

If you are interested in ensuring that the commission keeps together AAPI communities of interest, there’s a simple way to get involved. The Coalition of Asian Pacific Americans for Fair Redistricting (CAPAFR), anchored by the Asian Pacific American Legal Center, is holding meetings throughout California to focus on AAPI communities of interest. CAPAFR’s goal is to submit proposals that show the commission how AAPI communities of interest can be best kept together, while also respecting other communities of interest. To see a calendar of CAPAFR meetings or to learn more about redistricting in general, please visit www.capafr.org.

When will we know how this new redistricting experiment turns out? August 15, 2011, which is the commission’s deadline to adopt final redistricting plans. Before that deadline approaches, the commission must hear from the public. If the public does not come forward, communities could get divided in the redistricting process.

The next CAPAFR community meeting in San Francisco and San Mateo will be held February 24th 5:30pm-8pm at the Asian Law Caucus 55 Columbus Ave. San Francisco CA 94111. To RSVP please contact CAPAFR2011@gmail.com or visit http://www.capafr.org/sf-san-mateo-3rd-community-mtg1

Eugene Lee is the voting rights project director at the Asian Pacific American Legal Center, a member of Asian Center of Advancing Justice. (www.apalc.org). He directs work on voter protection, Voting Rights Act compliance, and ballot access policy and is currently working to strengthen the voice of AAPI communities during the 2011 redistricting process.

Deanna Kitamura is the statewide redistricting manager at the Asian Pacific American Legal Center, a member of Asian Center of Advancing Justice. She works with community partners to ensure that AAPI communities in California are engaged in the redistricting process.


Perspectives: Birthright citizenship; Chinese Americans have stake in safeguarding this right

January 19, 2011

NOTE: Originally published in the San Gabriel Valley Tribune on January 15, 2011.

This article has been re-posted with the permission of the author.

By Assemblyman Mike Eng

For many Asian Americans, and especially Chinese Americans, the current debate about birthright citizenship is a debate our community already knows. That is because the vast majority of Asian Americans would not be U.S. citizens today save for the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1898 decision in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which affirmed that the birthright citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment applied even to U.S.-born children of Chinese and other foreign nationals who were legally barred from naturalizing.

Thus, as a legislator, an immigration attorney and a descendant of Chinese immigrants, I am saddened and alarmed by the vitriol surrounding the birthright citizenship debate and the current push to strip away citizenship from the children of undocumented parents.

From the beginning, the history of Chinese Americans in the U.S. has been intricately tied to the debate around the right to citizenship.

Like so many immigrants, Chinese Americans, including my family, came to the United States to pursue the American Dream and to build a life for themselves and their families. Yet when Chinese immigrants arrived in the United States at the end of the 19th century, many were detained, incarcerated and repeatedly interrogated, sometimes for years.

What was the reason? The xenophobic Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the only law in U.S. history that explicitly prohibited entry into America on the basis of race and nationality, prevented them from stepping foot into the country. The Act was part of a widespread campaign to drive out predominantly low-wage Chinese immigrant workers, who were accused of driving down wages for “real Americans” and for failing to assimilate.

Consequently, Chinese immigrants ostensibly became the first undocumented immigrant population in the United States. After the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act, there was just one method by which most could gain entry to the U.S.: by becoming “paper sons” – erasing their real names, family ties and ancestral connections, and adopting false identities claiming to be the overseas offspring of Chinese who were already in the United States.

The current birthright citizenship debate resurrects the malicious spirit of the Chinese Exclusion Act. It is unfortunate that in today’s ugly debate around immigration, an immigrant child is not seen as a symbol of hope, but as an “anchor baby,” demonized as a way for parents to gain legal status in the United States. The legal reality is that these parents still face deportation, even if they have U.S.-born citizen children. In fact, the Department of Homeland Security has deported more than 100,000 parents of children who are U.S. citizens.

Instead we should celebrate the right to citizenship, as granted by the 14th Amendment, a quintessential cornerstone of American civil rights in itself. Obtaining citizenship is the important last step to being fully integrated in American society, where being a citizen gives one the right to vote, the permanent right to work in the U.S., and the right to travel freely abroad. It encourages civic participation and activism, and is a way for immigrants to show that they are proud to be an American. That is why every year, hundreds of thousands of immigrants gather at oath ceremonies throughout the country to pledge allegiance to the United States and to become U.S. citizens.

Immigration has also helped to drive the growth and prosperity of our nation. Throughout California, businesses owned by Latinos and Asians comprise more than one-quarter of all businesses in the state. And in Los Angeles alone, immigrants account for 34 percent of the area’s total economic output.

Instead of directing our energies toward stripping citizenship from children, we need to focus on achieving comprehensive immigration reform. Our broken immigration system has contributed to the undocumented population, because getting a visa to enter the United States takes up to 20 years.

Many of the estimated one million undocumented immigrants in the Asian American community include those whose family members have died while awaiting reunification through the overburdened family system. Would you wait 20 years to reunite with your loved ones?

The denial of citizenship runs counter to our values and what America is all about – a free and democratic society that welcomes its victims, treats people as individuals and respects their civil and human rights, and does not discriminate based on race, culture or country of origin. Instead, let us focus our energies together on achieving real and humane immigration reform.

Assemblyman Mike Eng represents the 49th District, which includes the cities of Alhambra, El Monte, Monterey Park, Rosemead, San Gabriel, San Marino, and South El Monte. Eng is the author of Assembly Concurrent Resolution 76, which designates December 17 as the “Day of Inclusion” in California and memorializes the historic Magnuson Act, which repealed the Chinese Exclusion Act and was signed into law on December 17, 1943.


Is ‘Muslim’ a Dirty Word?

December 16, 2010

By Veena Dubal, Staff Attorney, National Security and Civil Rights Program

In late November, we at the Asian Law Caucus received a fax from a company that works to defend the internet reputation of other companies.  They alerted us to the fact that there was a derogatory comment posted to the Google search under our listing.

The fax read, “It is in your best interest to address this problem as soon as possible.  Every time someone clicks on that derogatory link, the link has the potential to move-up in the listing.”

The next page of the fax included an image of the link the company was referring to.  It was a Yelp review of our non-profit which reads, “Bunch of the members came out to do a presentation for the Muslim community in Oakland on a Friday night.  They have done a lot to inform others of the[ir] basic rights.  Really a great group of individuals, I would love to work with them and see more of their community organization in the future.”

What exactly was derogatory or reputation-marring about this glowing review?  The word MUSLIM.  Yes, this company had marked “Muslim” as a derogatory tag word – a basis for which they could contact companies and solicit business.

This year, we have all been a part of or borne witness to the incendiary debates over Quran burning, the Park 51 Muslim community center, “home-grown terrorism,” etc.  For those of us raised on ideals of pluralism and who cherish religious freedom and diversity, these are no doubt extremely troubling times.

However, for many Muslim Americans, the concerns rise well above “troubling.” Many community members feel that their basic freedoms have been stripped of them.  They fear going to mosque because of the presence of informants.  They fear voicing their political opinions because critiquing U.S. foreign policy while being Muslim may get them labeled a terrorist.  They fear wearing religious garb, traveling, and donating money to charities.

And all of these are well-founded fears.  Just this month, two Muslim American youth were charged with attempted murder after being entrapped in an elaborate ruse set up by the FBI and community informants, a Sikh American cab driver in Sacramento was physically assaulted by a passenger who called him a “Osama bin Laden” and yelled “Muslim,” and the Washington Post published an expose on an FBI informant who was paid almost $200,000 in Irvine, California to infiltrate mosques.  And these were just the incidents that captured the attention of the national media.

When our Communications Director brought the news of the fax into my office, alerting me that an outside company asserted that our reputation was in danger because “Asian Law Caucus” had been associated with the word “Muslim,” I was speechless, and despite myself, surprised.  In some ways, this knowledge served as a tipping point in how I was thinking about the events of this past year.  This wasn’t just a debate about that reflected our fears of terrorism.   If the word “Muslim” has made its way into the dirty dictionary, then not only are Muslim Americans under siege, but we are all living in a state of moral emergency.

The United States cannot continue to see itself as the harbinger of global democracy and freedom when an entire religious population is being targeted by both civil and political society within our borders.  Stripping one community of its civil rights to the extent that a religious identifier becomes a dirty word beckons memories of totalitarian regimes.

Our deepest held values are being tested . . . and we are failing.


Blessed Are the Meek

November 30, 2010

NOTE: Originally published in the Washington Post on November 30, 2010.

This article has be re-posted with the permission of the author.

By Rajdeep Singh

Washington Post political reporter Karen Tumulty wrote Monday about the growing use of the idea of “American exceptionalism” by political conservatives as a “battle cry from a new front in the ongoing culture wars.”

Sarah Palin and many other prominent conservatives assert that “God has granted America a special role in human history.” It is this belief about America’s destiny that they say is “under attack” by liberals who downplay America’s distinctiveness.

Are these leaders saying that America has a special relationship with God?

How do you interpret this?

It is fashionable (and cliché) for politicians to pump bromides into the air about the uniqueness and superiority of American ideals. One simple way to measure the sincerity and seriousness of these politicians is by challenging them to resolve some festering obstacles to American exceptionalism, especially in the area of human rights. With respect to these core values, we can be peerless, but only if we stop acting like our peers.

Consider some examples:

America still puts people to death for crimes. This is hardly exceptional. The point here is not that human life is sacred. The point here is not even to suggest the impossibility of reconciling the death penalty with a belief in the sanctity of human life. The point here is much simpler: that, in the realm of capital punishment, according to Amnesty International, we presently keep company with such ingloriously led countries as Cuba, Iran, and North Korea, while much of the civilized world has abolished–or is moving toward abolition of–the death penalty.

American politicians still use hateful rhetoric against racial and religious minorities. According to a recent report by South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT), elected officials and some also-rans in American politics have repeatedly mocked and stereotyped Muslims in the post-9/11 environment. Perhaps this explains the recent spate of anti-mosque protests around the nation and why 39% of surveyed Americans believe that Muslims in our country should have to carry special identification cards naming their religion. Sadly, none of this is exceptional. If we continue to alienate Muslims, we will become more like France, which is hardly a fountain of optimism. If we oppose the construction of mosques in America, then we are morally in accord with Saudi Arabia, which forbids non-Muslims from building houses of worship. If we require Muslims in America to carry special identification cards on the basis of their religion, it should not surprise us to learn that there are historical antecedents for this in Afghanistan and Germany.

Being exceptional is not simply a matter of believing that we are better than others by way of divine entitlement. Being the best requires effort and humility. Politicians who celebrate American exceptionalism should walk the talk on human rights. Anything less would be lip service and laziness, both of which are fundamentally out-of-step with the American character.


Flip-flopping About a Bad Policy

October 15, 2010

NOTE: Originally published in the Huffington Post on October 14, 2010

This article has been re-posted with permission of the author.

By Margaret Huang

Last week, the Arlington County (Virginia) Board sent a letter to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) notifying the federal agency that the County does not wish to participate in the “Secure Communities” Initiative (SCI). The letter is a result of a resolution adopted by the County Board on September 28th expressing the County’s intent to withdraw from SCI. Arlington County adopted its resolution based on the repeated public statements by DHS that local jurisdictions could choose not to participate in the program. Very little is known – or understood – about the “Secure Communities” program, in large part due to contradictory information disseminated about the program by DHS. What Arlington County residents do know about “Secure Communities” is troubling for supporters of community policing, civil liberties and human rights.

Read the rest of this entry »


Protecting Speech, Preserving Charity: Why the High Court Should Refine “Material Support” Provision

April 5, 2010

This article has been re-posted with permission of the author from http://www.acslaw.org/node/15739

By Sahar Aziz, a civil rights attorney with the Bill of Rights Defense Committee. Ms. Aziz previously served as a senior policy advisor with the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

The U.S. Supreme Court recently heard argument in Humanitarian Law Project v. Holder. The plaintiffs, a human rights organization and a retired federal judge, sought to teach international human rights law and provide training on nonviolent conflict resolution to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Both organizations are designated as terrorist by the U.S. government.

Oral argument focused on whether such training and advocacy aimed at promoting peace constitutes pure speech protected by the First Amendment, thereby shielding plaintiffs from prosecution under laws that prohibit material support for terrorism. But rather than delve into the complex constitutional questions presented, the Court should follow the established doctrine of constitutional avoidance by interpreting the challenged provisions to require a showing of intent to further illegal activities. The avoidance doctrine dictates that if a case can be resolved on an alternative basis, the court should refrain from ruling on constitutional issues.

In the 1960s, at the height of the Cold War, the Supreme Court held in Scales v. United States that laws criminalizing membership in the Communist Party must be interpreted Read the rest of this entry »


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