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Immigration
Lawyers Urge Congress
Revoke Use of Secret Evidence
WASHINGTON The American Immigration
Lawyers Association (AILA) today urged Congress to approve H.R.
2121, a bill introduced by Representatives David Bonior (D-MI),
Tom Campbell (R-CA) and Bob Barr (R-GA), which would ban the use
of secret evidence during INS proceedings.
Provisions of two overly harsh 1996 laws
allow the Immigration and Naturalization Service to use secret
evidence to deport permanent residents, deny bond to any detained
immigrant and deny asylum and other immigration benefits to
people. In addition, those same overly harsh laws created a new
Star Chamber court that only hears deportation cases based
on secret evidence. As if that were not un-American enough, the
INS is now using secret evidence to deny immigrants mandatory
relief from deportation.
H.R. 2121, which has been endorsed by a
bi-partisan coalition of lawmakers from across the political
spectrum, would not let secret evidence be used in deportation
cases, bond hearings, immigration benefit cases and asylum
proceedings. The government could still prosecute and punish
terrorists, as it did in the horrible bombings of the World Trade
Center and the Federal Building in Oklahoma City, and in the
current case against a man accused of bringing explosive devices
into our country late last year.
The United States has long stood as a
beacon of hope for the oppressed across the world because of our
legal principles. These principles have been enshrined in the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Key among them
is that people accused of crimes have the right to see the
evidence against them, have a chance to confront their accusers
face-to-face, and interrogate witnesses. The secret evidence
provisions of the overly harsh 1996 laws violate these key
principles. They are un-American, said Jeanne Butterfield,
AILAs Executive Director.
Every federal court that has ruled on the use of secret evidence agrees that these provisions are unconstitutional. Former CIA Director James Woolsey has said the use of secret evidence is something that you would expect to find in Iraq. Admiral Woolsey is right: totalitarian and oppressive states use secret evidence against people. Democratic countries like the United States should not. We call upon Congress to restore American principles and American jurisprudence to our immigration laws.