CSS Settlement Approved
The
class action amnesty case, Catholic Social Services, Inc. v. Tom Ridge,
Department of Homeland Security (Civ S-86-1343-LKK), was approved by US Federal
Judge Lawrence K. Karlton on January 23, 2004.
This case was the longest pending class action suit against the former
INS.
In
September 2003, the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law and the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reached a settlement allowing over 150,000
undocumented immigrants to apply for legal resident status under a one-time
amnesty program that became law in 1986. The
law allowed undocumented immigrants who had resided in the US since 1982 to
obtain legal status. The class
action suit challenged an INS rule that disqualified those who had briefly
traveled abroad during the period of required residence for the amnesty.
In
April 1988, Judge Karlton ruled that the travel rule was illegal and extended
the application period for four months for those who had been turned away.
INS agreed to change the rule, but appealed the judge’s decision to
grant an extension. For the next
fifteen years, INS repeatedly appealed federal court orders upholding the
extension.
While
the appeals were pending, class members were temporarily protected from
deportation and were allowed to apply for work permits.
Under
the approved settlement, immigrants who believe they qualified for the 1986
amnesty but were turned away have a one-year period beginning in May 2004 to
apply to legalize their status. Class
members will be allowed to work while their applications are pending.
The DHS also agreed to pay the plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees.
The
terms of the settlement are available at www.centerforhumanrights.org.
In a separate class action case, Newman v. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law also represent the plaintiffs. The case addresses another 100,000 immigrants who were turned away by INS during the amnesty program because they too had briefly traveled abroad. However, these plaintiffs returned by improperly using non-immigrant visas such as student and visitor visas. A settlement has been reached in this case, which is pending approval by a federal court in Los Angeles.
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