Posted on 03/31/2016 5:52:06 PM PDT by Elderberry
On March 28th, lawyers for the 26 Republican Governors and Attorneys General, led by the State of Texas and its Attorney General Ken Paxton, filed their response brief in the lawsuit they initiated in December of 2014 to stop President Obamas executive actions. David Leopold did an analysis of that brief, noting, Like everything else about this case, the brief is politically motivated and filled with confusion and obfuscation.
But misleading the Supreme Court is hardly the brainchild of the Texas lawyers. It started with U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, a sympathetic jurist whom the GOP plaintiffs sought out to hear their grievance against DAPA and DACA+. Hanen cynically took advantage of the confusing and complicated nature of immigration law and hinged a legally sloppy order blocking executive immigration guidance on the fallacy that the temporary deportation deferrals unlawfully bestowed upon undocumented immigrants what he termed lawful presence status. Hanens misleading and legally unsupported concoction was later refined and repackaged by the 5th circuit appeals court as lawful presence. Never mind that no such concepts exist in the law in the manner that Hanen (and later the 5th circuit) claimed they did.
And so began a shamelessly political grievance, cleverly packaged by GOP politicians as a legal complaint. In fact, the very first decision the Texas Attorney Generals office made in the case proves that point. Instead of filing the lawsuit in Austin or Washington DC (which even the infamous Sheriff Joe Arpaio did), the Republican politicians deposited the case in the courtroom of Andrew Hanen whod earned his anti-Obama reputation by gratuitously excoriating the administration in unrelated criminal cases because he didnt agree with the Presidents immigration policies.
As expected Hanen dutifully blocked the Presidents executive actions hours before they were set to begin going into effect. The administration had little choice but to appeal Hanens order to the 5th circuit appeals court which oversees Texas and which is considered by many to be the most conservative court in the land. To no ones surprise, the appeals court affirmed Hanens ruling.
Next month, Hanens order falls into the lap of Chief Justice John Roberts. How the Chief Justice resolves U.S. v. Texas will say a lot about his stated commitment to keep political battles out of the federal courts. And it will tell us whether the Roberts court will allow the judiciary to descend into political chaos.
In February of 2015, Americas Voice issued a report on Hanen titled, A Coordinated Attack: Judge Hanen and the Nativist Lawsuit Against DAPA and DACA:
Judge Hanen Is the Ideal Judge for Immigration Nativists: The Judge has a history of opining well beyond the scope of his jurisdiction, and an anti-immigration bent. Clearly, the plaintiffs filed their suit in Brownsville for one reasona friendly judge.
In one case, after a defendant pled guilty and the outcome was no longer a pending question, Judge Hanen felt compelled to write a 4-page opinion criticizing federal immigration policy, without ordering anything involving the defendant (Source: U.S. v. Cabrera,711 F.Supp.2d 736 (S.D. Tex. May 4, 2010)).
In another case, when a Salvadoran criminal defendant who received Convention Against Torture (CAT) protection against deportation applied to Judge Hanen to relocate within the United States, a routine matter, Judge Hanen issued a 24-page opinion criticizing the US implementation of CAT, while conceding he had no jurisdiction over the policy (Source: U.S. v. Ramirez, No. 07-cr-041, 2014 WL 3843853 (S.D.Tex. Aug. 1, 2014)).
The Washington Times Stephen Dinan recently declared, the states challenging President Obamas deportation amnesty have already won the first round in court when reporting that Judge Hanen was assigned the case.
As was clear from Hanens rulings, he was unabashed about showing his animus towards the Obama administration and immigrants. So, the Texas AG knew what theyd get in Hanen a Judge who was blatantly anti-immigrant. And, they werent the only ones. Orly Taitz, did too. Notorious as the Birther Queen who launched and instigated the racist attack on President Obamas citizenship, Taitz was also filing anti-immigrant lawsuits back in 2014. And, she knew exactly where to go: Judge Hanens court. The OC Weekly reported on Taitz and her fondness for Hanen:
[The] Queen of the Birfers may have tipped off in a letter to the office of vehemently anti-immigrant Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach) that she shopped for a Brownsville jurist most sensitive to her cause.
U.S. District Court Judge Andrew S. Hanen earlier this month set a Wednesday hearing for Taitzs lawsuit, which seeks to have the undocumented deported immediately or quarantined for two months on grounds they rob American citizens of jobs, wages and benefits and expose them to crime and epidemics of infectious diseases, including at least one Taitz claims to have contracted while performing dental work on an illegal immigrant.
On OrlyTaitzEsq.com, Taitz posted a letter to Rohrabachers Executive Assistant Kathleen Staunton that announced Hanen set the hearing date and urged that the news be spread to other like-minded Members of Congress.
At the Daily Kos Kerry Eleveld examined some of Taitzs filings and why she needed a Judge who shared her world view:
Taitz needed to find a sympathetic judge because, as one might expect, her lawsuit was a piece of work. In her initial complaint, filed July 14, 2014, Taitz accuses the federal government of trafficking illegal aliens and seeks either an emergency immediate turnaround and deportation of the children or a two-month quarantine of them in a FEMA facility. At the time, the government was trying to find a humane and legal way of absorbing the influx of thousands of refugee children from Central America.
After Judge Hanen ordered the U.S. government to explain why he shouldnt grant Taitzs request, she was ecstatic.
As OC Weekly noted, Taitz shared her enthusiasm for Hanen in a letter to members of Congress, which she posted on her website, Judge Hanen is a judge who previously excoriated the US government for acting as human smugglers.
In addition, the case to which Eleveld refers, Taitz v. Johnson, et. al., (Docket Number 1:14-cv-00119) is still proceeding in Hanens court. Thats the one on trafficking illegal aliens. Her latest filing, dated March 16, 2016, makes the ludicrous claim that the Obama administration is engaged in a nefarious ruse designed to expose the American people to dangerous diseases:
Plaintiff is greatly concerned that by the end of the Obama administration all of the infectious diseases will be reclassified as diseases of no public significance, including TB and Ebola.
At first blush, those policies are totally unfathomable.
Thats fairly standard language (and reasoning) from the filings of Taitz in Hanens court and whats unfathomable is that her case remains pending before him. Taitz has also attempted to intervene in United States v. Texas and Hanen has taken her request under advisement, according to the case filings.
Hanens anti-immigrant record did not go unnoticed outside of Brownsville. The New York Times Editorial pointed it out on Jan. 20, 2015:
The first thing to know about the lawsuit brought by two dozen states to block President Obamas executive actions on immigration is that it is a meritless screed wrapped in flimsy legal cloth and deposited on the doorstep of a federal district judge in Brownsville, Tex.
The second thing to know is that the judge, Andrew Hanen, may well look kindly on the suit. He made news in 2013 with a politically charged ruling accusing the Obama administration of criminally conspiring with Mexican drug cartels to smuggle children over the border (he really said that), which is surely why the plaintiffs like their chances.
And, the plaintiffs did like their chances. For comparison, Arpaios case was quickly dismissed for lack of standing shortly after it was argued, back in December of 2014: The role of the Judiciary is to resolve cases and controversies properly brought by parties with a concrete and particularized injury not to engage in policymaking better left to the political branches, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell wrote in an opinion.
That should have been the same outcome for Texas v. U.S. But, Hanen has been more than happy to engage in both policymaking and politics. So it was not unexpected when Hanen issued a nationwide injunction against DAPA and expanded DACA on February 17, 2015. His 123 page order read like vintage Hanen. As Frank Wilkinson at Bloomberg View, wrote:
Altogether, the [Texas] complaint reads as if it were cobbled together on the sofa of Fox & Friends. Based on the avalanche of ill consequences envisioned by Texas, however, the judge found that the state had standing to sue. So Hanens injunction has halted, for now, Obamas executive action.
After Hanen issued the GOP injunction blocking DAPA and DACA+, The Los Angeles Times also pointed out Hanens politically charged record in an article titled, U.S. Judge Andrew Hanen has history of opposing Obama immigration policies:
Many immigrant advocates were not surprised to see a conservative federal judge in south Texas issue an injunction late Monday temporarily blocking President Obamas program to defer deportation for nearly 5 million immigrants living in the United States illegally.
U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen has developed a reputation as an outspoken judicial critic of the Obama administrations immigration policies.
What were seeing with this judge is a trend of him advocating for policies that are targeting specifically immigrant communities, said Cristina Jimenez, New York-based co-founder and managing director of the immigrant advocacy group United We Dream.
Hanen has written that the court takes no position on immigration reform, observing that it is a subject laced with controversy and is a matter of much political debate which is not the province of the judicial branch. But in rulings he has opined on the enforcement of immigration law.
Hanens extra-judicial opining on immigration policy was examined by Law professor Anil Kalhan in a law review article examining the Texas case, Deferred Action, Supervised Enforcement Discretion, and the Rule of Law Basis for Executive Action on Immigration, U.C.L.A. Law Review, 2015. In the introduction, Kalhan notes:
In political terms, these attackswhile legally unfounded, as I explain in this Articleare nevertheless unsurprising, given the toxic politics of immigration. More surprising, however, is the extent to which judicial discourse has closely mirrored the rhetoric and modes of argument that prevail in anti-immigration public discourse. Soon after the announcement, a group of Republican governors filed suit seeking to invalidate the deferred action initiatives. The complaintwhich inveighs against the President for unilaterally suspend[ing] the immigration laws by executive fiatwas filed in Brownsville, Texas, in order to steer its assignment to U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, who has for years garnered headlines as a strident critic of the Obama administrations immigration policies.
Kalhan also states, Like his earlier immigration-related commentaries, Judge Hanens ruling is entirely continuous with the rhetoric and modes of argument that prevail in political discourse, and ultimately amounts to what I describe elsewhere as judicial truthiness. This law review is a must-read for anyone who is interested in understand whats behind the case thats now before the U.S. Supreme Court. After Kalhan provided a summary of the politically charged, anti-immigrant rhetoric present in many of Hanens opinions, he noted:
Given this substantial body of injudicious commentary, reasonable observers could not have been surprisedand indeed, no observers in fact seemed surprisedwhen Judge Hanen approached Texas v. United States in a comparable manner.
Indeed, no one was surprised, especially the GOP Governors and Attorneys General who wanted Hanen to hear the political dispute they dressed up as a legal claim. This line from Kalhan captures the essence of Judge Hanen:
Like Judge Hanens earlier immigration-related opinions, therefore, Texas v. United States reads more like a document written to intervene in political debates than a judicial opinion carefully analyzing legal issues arising from DACA and DAPA.
Thats right. But, thats not the role of the federal judiciary.
Of course, it was a big plus that Hanens court is also in the Fifth Circuit, home of arguably the most conservative appeals court in the country. While the DC circuit appeals court threw out Arpaios lawsuit on standing grounds, the Fifth Circuit twice upheld Hanens injunction blocking DAPA and DACA+; first by refusing to temporarily lift the injunction pending appeal and then by upholding the injunction on the merits. But the courts decision was hardly unanimous, Judge Judge Carolyn Dineen King delivered a blistering dissent, emphasizing that the case should have been dismissed outright because it had no place in court:
The policy decisions at issue in this case are best resolved not by judicial fiat, but via the political process. That this case essentially boils down to a policy dispute is underscored not only by the dozens of amicus briefs filed in this case by interested parties across the ideological spectrumMayors, Senators, Representatives, and law enforcement officials, among othersbut also by the district courts opinion, which repeatedly expresses frustration that the Secretary is actively act[ing] to thwart the immigration laws and is not just rewriting the laws [but is] creating them from scratch. The majoritys observation that this suit involves policy disagreements masquerading as legal claims is also telling. Whether or not the district courts characterization of this case is accuratethough the record number of removals in recent years demonstrates that it is notto the extent some are unhappy with the vigor of DHSs enforcement efforts, their remedies lie in the political process, not in litigation.
In an interview with Texas Tribune, Scott Keller and Chip Roy, the lawyers arguing for Texas, who used to work for noted anti-immigrant Senators John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, tried to downplay their forum-shopping:
TT: Why was the lawsuit filed in Brownsville? There have been a lot of people who have said that [Governor Greg] Abbott went shopping for a judge who has been on record about how frustrated he is about the illegal immigration situation. Was that a factor?
Roy: To echo what Scott said, we werent here in December. It was the previous administration that made that determination. But Ill just mention that out of the thousands of cases we deal with, rarely when were dealing with lawsuits out in Travis County or filed throughout the state in venues that may or may not be favorable, we dont often get a lot of venue questions about that. But specifically on this, its South Texas. Its not like this was filed in a jurisdiction that has no connection to the issue at hand. This is in the heart of the area where youre going to feel the real impact. And there was no guarantee they were going to get Hanen.
No guarantee theyd get Hanen, but clearly they wanted him and chances were really good that theyd get him.
Professor Stephen Legomsky, a former general counsel to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), pointed to Hanens rhetoric in January of 2016, noting a group of states, led by Texas, found a sympathetic federal judge in Brownsville. Legomsky continued, By suing in Brownsville, Texass lawyers knew they were likely to land Judge Andrew Hanen, whose earlier vitriolic condemnations of President Obamas immigration enforcement policies made him an inviting decision-maker. They also knew that the inevitable appeal would have to be filed with the Fifth Circuit, the nations most politically conservative federal appeals court.
On April 18, 2016, the United States Supreme Court will hear arguments in the U.S v. Texas. This will prove a challenge to Chief Justice John Roberts who has made it his mission to avoid litigating political questions in the federal courts. Hell have to decide if the Judge hand-picked by the Texas GOP and Orly Taitz should even have jurisdiction to hear the brazenly political dispute that wound up in his court courtesy of the GOP and judge Hanen.
Hanen seems to relish his newfound role as the Joe Arpaio of the federal judiciary. The big question is whether Chief Justice Roberts validates his badge.
It gives an insight into how the other side thinks.
Gosh, liberals never consider which judge they will get when deciding where to file a lawsuit.
[Frank Sharry] America's Voice
In 2008 he left the Forum to become the founder and Executive Director of America's Voice, an organization that serves as the communications arm of the immigration reform movement. Since its inception America's Voice has become a visible and vocal advocate for comprehensive immigration reform, the DREAM Act (a measure that would enable young people who immigrated to America illegally to attend college or serve in the military as a way to earn citizenship), and administrative changes aimed at relieving the sense of siege experienced in immigrant communities throughout America as local and federal enforcement continues to be expanded.
Sharry has also been featured in the documentary film series "How Democracy Works Now" by filmmakers Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini. The series features 12 films about the immigration debate in America from 2000 through 2007. The last film in the series was aired on HBO in March 2010 under the title "Senators' Bargain." It shows Sharry working with both Senator Edward Kennedy and the Bush White House for an immigration compromise that would have legalized most of the nation's 12 million undocumented immigrants, a compromise that was defeated on the floor of the U.S. Senate.
They need 5-3 to override the 5th Circuit and start amnesty.
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