
Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Case Involving Detention of Permanent Residents Prior To Deportation
This
week, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case involving the indefinite
detention of permanent residents. In 1996, Congress passed new laws dealing with
detention and deportation of noncitizens who have committed crimes in the
The current case, involving Hyung Joon Kim, a permanent resident from
At the hearing, government lawyers argued that the case is about public safety
and security, and that those being detained have been convicted of crimes that
mean they no longer have the right to live in the
Lawyers for Kim argued that while some people the government seeks to deport
might be dangerous and fail to appear for hearings, this is not the case for all
of them, and that there should therefore be individual hearings to determine
whether a person should be released. They also added that not everyone the
government places in deportation proceedings ends up being ordered deported.
A decision is expected sometime this summer.
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