Federal judge in Hawaii
freezes President Trump’s
new travel ban
By Maria Sacchetti, Kalani Takase and Matt Zapotosky
March 15 at 6:47 PM
Source:
The Washington Post
A
federal judge in Hawaii has frozen President Trump’s new executive order
temporarily barring the issuance of new visas to citizens of six-Muslim
majority countries and suspending the admission of new refugees.
U.S.
District Judge Derrick K. Watson froze the order nationwide.
Watson
was the second of three judges to hear arguments Wednesday on whether to freeze
the ban. A federal judge in Maryland said he also could rule before day’s end
after a morning hearing, and the same federal judge in Washington state who
suspended Trump’s first travel ban was set to hear arguments starting at 5 p.m.
Eastern.
The
hearing in Hawaii came in response to a lawsuit filed by the state itself.
Lawyers for Hawaii alleged the new travel ban, much like the old, violates the
establishment clause of the First Amendment because it is essentially a Muslim
ban, hurts the ability of state businesses and universities to recruit top
talent and damages the state’s robust tourism industry.
They
pointed particularly to the case of Ismail Elshikh, the imam of the Muslim
Association of Hawaii, whose mother-in-law’s application for an immigrant visa
was still being processed. Under the new executive order, lawyers for Hawaii
said, Elshikh feared that his mother-in-law would ultimately be banned from
entering the United States.
“Dr.
Elshikh certainly has standing in this case. He, along with all of the Muslim
residents in Hawaii face higher hurdles to see family because of religious
faith,” lawyer Colleen Roh Sinzdak said at the hearing. “It is not merely a
harm to the Muslim residents of the state of Hawaii, but also is a harm to the
United State as a whole and is against the First Amendment itself.”
Justice
Department lawyers argued that
the president was well within his authority to impose the ban, and that those
challenging it had raised only speculative harms.
“They
bear the burden of showing irreparable harm ... and there is no harm at all,”
said Acting U.S. Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall, who argued on behalf of the
government in Greenbelt, Md. in the morning and by phone in Hawaii in the
afternoon.
The
arguments were similar at the hearing in Maryland, where a federal judge
peppered both sides with pointed questions about whether the revised executive
order would harm Muslims, refugees and the organizations that serve them.
“I
think we’ve been going for quite a while,” U.S. District Judge Theodore D.
Chuang said after the nearly two-hour hearing. “I appreciate everyone’s
advocacy. . . . I’ll try to issue a
written ruling — hopefully today, but not necessarily.”
The
president’s new executive order will suspend the U.S. refugee program for 120
days, halt for 90 days the issuance of new visas to people from six
Muslim-majority countries and reduce the number of refugees allowed to enter
the United States this year from 110,000 to 50,000.
What
Trump's revised travel ban misses about terrorist attacks in the U.S.
The
six nations affected by President Trump's executive action on immigration are
not actually countries where terrorists who have carried out fatal attacks the
United States came from. (Daron Taylor/The Washington Post)
The
ACLU and lawyers for refugee aid organizations asked Chuang to halt the entire
order, arguing that it is a pretext to discriminate against Muslims, who make
up the majority of refugees admitted to the United States.
“If
you were trying to ban Muslims,” ACLU lawyer Omar C. Jadwat told the Chuang in
court, “banning refugees would be one compelling way to do it.”
Justin
Cox, a lawyer for the National Immigration Law Center who also argued in court,
said refugees and immigrants feel that Trump’s order essentially targets Islam.
“All of these individuals express that they feel that their religion has been
condemned by the executive order,” he said.
Justice
Department lawyers say the order is “substantially different” from Trump’s
Jan. 27 travel ban, which stranded thousands of travelers overseas and
ignited protests at airports and elsewhere before it was blocked by U.S.
District Judge James L. Robart in Seattle. The Trump administration
urged Chuang not to halt the order, saying its chief goal is to prevent
terrorists from entering the country.
The
six countries named in the order, which are majority-Muslim, were selected
because the administration of former President Barack Obama identified them as
having security threats, Wall told the judge, adding: “What he’s concerned
about are radical Islamic terrorists.”
Wall
said the plaintiffs in the legal challenge, who include individuals as well as
refugee-aid agencies, would not suffer immediate harm from the order because it
provides for waivers. Nor would the aid agencies suffer financially, he said,
because they would have fewer refugees to serve, and therefore fewer expenses.
But
the ACLU and other lawyers said the list of potential harms is long. Refugees
already in the United States will remain separated from families living in
dangerous conditions overseas, they said. Other refugees who had expected to
come to the United States this fiscal year would not be allowed in. HIAS, the nation’s
oldest refugee resettlement organization, said it would lose funding and would
probably have to lay off employees because of the reduced refugee admissions.
The organization used to be known as the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society.
During
the hearing, Chuang said it was unclear whether he could order the president to
admit all refugees.
The
judge also questioned the urgency of the government’s review of the visa and
refugee vetting process, noting that one report ordered in Trump’s first
executive order on Jan. 27 was overdue.
“Not
that the government always meets deadlines on reports, I understand,” the judge
said.
Wall
said those reviews are underway.
Near
the end of the hearing, Chuang noted the polarization in the case, weighing the
safety of refugees against Trump’s stated fears for security at home.
“Is
there somewhere in between?” the judge asked.
Chuang
signaled that he could rule Wednesday, but lawyers for refugee rights groups
said they are also looking to court hearings in Washington state and Hawaii for
possible relief. Robart, who blocked Trump’s first order, was set to hear the
case in Washington Wednesday.
Trump’s
first travel ban was a less-detailed directive that abruptly suspended the
refugee program, halted travel for all citizens of seven majority-Muslim
countries, including travelers who already had been issued visas, and lowered
the cap on refugee arrivals.
After
parts of that order were frozen, Trump issued the new executive order, giving
travelers 10 days’ notice and, government lawyers say, making several
significant changes. The order removes Iraq from the list of banned countries,
exempts visa and green-card holders, and allows excluded foreigners to apply
for waivers to enter the United States.
The
order still applies to people who want to come to the United States and are
citizens of Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, Yemen and Syria. The Department of Homeland Security
said on its website that the six nations have been identified as
“countries of concern due to the national security risks associated with their
instability and the prevalence of terrorist fighters in their territories.”
Government
lawyers also alleged in court filings that some refugees have proved to be
national security threats. For instance, they said a Somali refugee was
convicted of attempting to bomb a Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in Oregon
and that the FBI is investigating more than 300 refugees for potential
terrorist activities.
But
the plaintiffs, led by the International Refugee Assistance Project, said in
court filings that the government’s evidence about security
threats was “implausibly thin.” They said the Somali refugee had
lived in the United States since he was a toddler, and that any improved
screening could not have predicted his crime. And they said the FBI’s claims
about 300 investigations are “meaningless” without evidence.
The
plaintiffs allege that the Trump administration has retooled its original
executive order with the continued goal of discriminating against Muslims. They
point to statements by Trump and some of his advisers during the presidential
campaign and afterward that, they say, demonstrated an intent to bar Muslims from
entering the United States.
“While
the revised order differs in some respects from the first, it is no less a
reflection of discriminatory intent than the previous version,” they said in
legal briefs filed March 10.