Elected Officials Call For Suspension Of INS Registration
Following is the text of the letter of Senator Russell D. Feingold (D- WI),
Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA) and Representative John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI)
to Attorney-General John D. Ashcroft:
December 23, 2002
The Honorable
John D. Ashcroft
Attorney General of the United States
U.S. Department of Justice
10th Street and Constitution Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Mr. Attorney General:
We write to urge you to suspend further implementation of the National Security
Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS) by the U.S. Department of Justice Immigration
and Naturalization Service (INS) until Congress and the Department conduct a
complete and thorough review of this program. We have grave doubts about whether
the INS's implementation of NSEERS has struck the proper balance between securing
our borders on the one hand and
respecting the civil liberties of foreign students, businesspeople, and visitors
who have come to our nation legally on the other.
Rather, this special registration program appears to be a component of a second
wave of roundups and detentions of Arab and Muslim males disguised as a perfunctory
registration requirement. Reports indicate that hundreds of individuals who
have voluntarily appeared to register at INS offices around the country (but
primarily in California) have been arrested and detained without reasonable
justification. According to news reports, many of those detained have applications
pending for adjustment of status on which the INS has not yet acted.
For example, according to a news report, a 16 year old boy who entered the
country lawfully on a student visa was separated from his pregnant mother, even
though he is seeking permanent residency to be able to join his mother, who
is a permanent resident, and stepfather, who is a US citizen, in America. According
to another report, a successful Iranian Jewish businessman, who had fled Iran
and believed he could find freedom and security in America, was arrested and
jailed even though he has had an application for permanent residency pending
with the INS for five years. It is unjust to penalize and detain people who
have a claim to lawful status when, in many cases, it is the INS processing
backlog that has caused the delay in approving status-adjustment applications.
We are also concerned by reports that detainees have been denied access to
counsel and are being held in deplorable conditions, including being deprived
of food for more than 24 hours and being forced to sleep on cold floors.
These reports are all the more troubling because this new program comes one
year after the Department launched its first roundup and detention of mostly
Arab and Muslim men, the vast majority of whom were detained for immigration
violations and ultimately cleared of any involvement in terrorist activity.
You have so far failed to identify most of the hundreds of individuals arrested
and detained in the wake of September 11 or their counsel. This pattern of targeting
persons for arrest based on race, religion, ethnicity, or national origin rather
than on specific evidence of criminal activity or connections with terrorist
organizations only serves to undermine the trust of the American people, especially
the Arab and Muslim American communities whose cooperation we need more than
ever to protect our nation.
Furthermore, we are concerned about the interview stage of the NSEERS special
registration program. We understand that information is sought on the individual's
credit card, bank account, and video rental card numbers, and, for those on
student visas, on affiliation with campus political and religious groups and
names of roommates. These questions raise serious privacy and constitutional
concerns.
We request that you immediately provide to us and release publicly information
about implementation of NSEERS, including the following:1. All policy directives
or guidance issued to officials about implementation of NSEERS, including the
role of the FBI in conducting national security background checks of registrants;
2. An explanation of why certain INS District Offices detained persons with
pending status-adjustment applications;
3. All policy directives or guidance issued to officials about making public
statements or disclosures about these individuals; and
4. A full explanation of how information gathered during interviews of registrants
will be stored, used, or transmitted to other federal, state, or local agencies.
We further request that you release information about individuals taken into
custody as soon as possible, including the following:
5. The identity of each individual who attempted to register pursuant to NSEERS
but was taken into custody, including the individual's name, citizenship status,
and place of birth;
6. The date of arrest of each detainee;
7. The date charges, if any, were brought against each detainee;
8. The charges brought, if any, against each detainee and, if no charges were
brought, an explanation of why the individual was taken into custody;
9. The basis for continuing to detain those individuals who have been cleared
of any connection with terrorism but are still in detention;
10. The identity of and contact information for any lawyer representing any
detainee, including names, addresses, and phone numbers; and
11. The identity of any detainee who is not represented by counsel.
The Department of Justice should aggressively investigate and prevent future
terrorist attacks, but should at the same time act with constitutional restraint.
The Department of Justice has a responsibility to release sufficient information
about the special registration program and the detainees to allow Congress and
the American people to decide whether the Department has acted appropriately
and consistent with the Constitution.
In addition, we urge you to suspend further implementation of NSEERS pending
congressional review. It is imperative that you take steps to reassure Congress
and the American people that this special registration program is not a detention
program falling just short of widespread internment of Arabs and Muslims. We
further urge you to take all necessary steps to ensure that the fundamental
constitutional rights of individuals already detained are protected, including
access to counsel.
Times of crisis are the true test of a democracy. Our nation still bears the
scars of an earlier crisis when our government went too far by detaining Japanese,
German, and Italian Americans based on their race, ethnicity, or national origin.
We should not repeat these painful mistakes.
We look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
RUSSELL D. FEINGOLD
U.S. SENATOR
http://feingold.senate.gov
EDWARD M. KENNEDY
U.S. SENATOR
http://kennedy.senate.gov
JOHN CONYERS, Jr.
U.S. REPRESENTATIVE
http://www.house.gov/conyers
Date/Time Last Modified: 1/16/2003 10:48:12 AM
© 2004, Human Development
Foundation. All rights reserved.
1350 Remington Road, Suite W, Schaumburg, Il. 60173
Toll Free: (800) 705-1310 | Email: info@yespakistan.com
| Privacy Policy
|