Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge

The Obama administration heads back into federal court before a skeptical judge here Thursday in an attempt to revive the president’s plan to shield up to 5 million people from the threat of deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen of Texas, who ordered a freeze last month on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, has demanded that government lawyers “fully explain” why the administration began accepting applications for the program earlier than they had indicated.

The hearing is one more step in what is expected to be a long legal battle over an issue that has divided Democrats and Republicans and will be a focus in the 2016 presidential campaign. Legal experts predict that the case will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court, but not before delaying a signature executive effort by Obama in the final two years of his presidency.

The administration wants to move the case along in hopes of prevailing in court and implementing the immigration plan while Obama is still in office.

Obama announced in November that he was using his executive power to grant three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to about 4 million adults who are parents of U.S. citizens and have lived in the country for at least five years. He said the program was simply an extension of his authority to prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no practical way to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

But Hanen ordered the freeze Feb. 16 after Texas and 25 other states sued to halt the program, arguing that Obama had overstepped his constitutional authority by acting without congressional approval. The states also said the immigration plan would impose an unfair financial burden on them.

On Feb. 23, the administration asked Hanen to lift his own injunction and allow the president’s immigration initiatives to proceed. California, New York, Illinois and 11 other states — many with the highest populations of immigrants eligible for Obama’s program — asked a federal appeals court March 12 to lift Hanen’s freeze, saying the states cannot interfere with federal immigration policy.

Those states also argued that Obama’s plan would actually benefit individual states in the form of increased tax revenue from more workers, as well as stronger families. The motion filed by the states called Hanen’s order “unprecedented and wrong.”

The majority of immigrants eligible for “deferred action” live in those 14 states — 1.5 million in California, 338,000 in New York and 280,000 in Illinois.

Texas, however, has the second-most eligible immigrants, with 743,000, according to Migration Policy Institute estimates.

Hanen, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, has expressed hostility toward executive actions. He has also indicated that he sympathizes with claims by Texas and the other 25 states that the immigration plan would impose financial hardships such as the costs of issuing driver’s licenses.

“There will be no effective way of putting the toothpaste back in the tube’’ if the government begins granting immigrants deferred status, Hanen wrote in his opinion blocking the plan.

Hanen’s ruling came two days before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was set to start accepting applications for the program.

Obama’s plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, would offer three-year work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal records.

DAPA would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Obama said at the time that he would issue the same protections to a group of immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. About 300,000 more people would be eligible under the expanded eligibility rules; the Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin accepting applications from those people starting Feb. 18.

However, the department also said the change from two years of protection to three years would take effect before that.

The current dispute in court in Brownsville is over what Justice Department lawyers told the judge during recent hearings as scheduling matters were discussed. In January, government lawyers said nothing would be happening before Feb. 18.

This month, government lawyers disclosed to Hanen that, in what they called “an abundance of caution,” the government had been granting the three-year permits since November to DACA applicants who qualified under the 2012 rules. The talk of the Feb. 18 date “may have led to confusion,” six Justice Department lawyers wrote in a legal brief.

Lawyers for Texas and the other states said the actions were “difficult to square” with the government lawyers’ earlier statements in the case.

The administration is eager to move on and make its case to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. It has asked the appellate court for a decision on the stay within 14 days and for arguments on the constitutional issues in the case to be held by June.

But the matter remains in Hanen’s court for now, and lawyers for the 26 states have asked permission to look further into the administration’s actions on the immigration program.

Follow @davidzucchino for national news.

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

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Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge

The Obama administration heads back into federal court before a skeptical judge here Thursday in an attempt to revive the president’s plan to shield up to 5 million people from the threat of deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen of Texas, who ordered a freeze last month on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, has demanded that government lawyers “fully explain” why the administration began accepting applications for the program earlier than they had indicated.

The hearing is one more step in what is expected to be a long legal battle over an issue that has divided Democrats and Republicans and will be a focus in the 2016 presidential campaign. Legal experts predict that the case will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court, but not before delaying a signature executive effort by Obama in the final two years of his presidency.

The administration wants to move the case along in hopes of prevailing in court and implementing the immigration plan while Obama is still in office.

Obama announced in November that he was using his executive power to grant three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to about 4 million adults who are parents of U.S. citizens and have lived in the country for at least five years. He said the program was simply an extension of his authority to prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no practical way to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

But Hanen ordered the freeze Feb. 16 after Texas and 25 other states sued to halt the program, arguing that Obama had overstepped his constitutional authority by acting without congressional approval. The states also said the immigration plan would impose an unfair financial burden on them.

On Feb. 23, the administration asked Hanen to lift his own injunction and allow the president’s immigration initiatives to proceed. California, New York, Illinois and 11 other states — many with the highest populations of immigrants eligible for Obama’s program — asked a federal appeals court March 12 to lift Hanen’s freeze, saying the states cannot interfere with federal immigration policy.

Those states also argued that Obama’s plan would actually benefit individual states in the form of increased tax revenue from more workers, as well as stronger families. The motion filed by the states called Hanen’s order “unprecedented and wrong.”

The majority of immigrants eligible for “deferred action” live in those 14 states — 1.5 million in California, 338,000 in New York and 280,000 in Illinois.

Texas, however, has the second-most eligible immigrants, with 743,000, according to Migration Policy Institute estimates.

Hanen, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, has expressed hostility toward executive actions. He has also indicated that he sympathizes with claims by Texas and the other 25 states that the immigration plan would impose financial hardships such as the costs of issuing driver’s licenses.

“There will be no effective way of putting the toothpaste back in the tube’’ if the government begins granting immigrants deferred status, Hanen wrote in his opinion blocking the plan.

Hanen’s ruling came two days before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was set to start accepting applications for the program.

Obama’s plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, would offer three-year work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal records.

DAPA would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Obama said at the time that he would issue the same protections to a group of immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. About 300,000 more people would be eligible under the expanded eligibility rules; the Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin accepting applications from those people starting Feb. 18.

However, the department also said the change from two years of protection to three years would take effect before that.

The current dispute in court in Brownsville is over what Justice Department lawyers told the judge during recent hearings as scheduling matters were discussed. In January, government lawyers said nothing would be happening before Feb. 18.

This month, government lawyers disclosed to Hanen that, in what they called “an abundance of caution,” the government had been granting the three-year permits since November to DACA applicants who qualified under the 2012 rules. The talk of the Feb. 18 date “may have led to confusion,” six Justice Department lawyers wrote in a legal brief.

Lawyers for Texas and the other states said the actions were “difficult to square” with the government lawyers’ earlier statements in the case.

The administration is eager to move on and make its case to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. It has asked the appellate court for a decision on the stay within 14 days and for arguments on the constitutional issues in the case to be held by June.

But the matter remains in Hanen’s court for now, and lawyers for the 26 states have asked permission to look further into the administration’s actions on the immigration program.

Follow @davidzucchino for national news.

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-obama-hearing-20150318-story.html?track=rss
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Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge

The Obama administration heads back into federal court before a skeptical judge here Thursday in an attempt to revive the president’s plan to shield up to 5 million people from the threat of deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen of Texas, who ordered a freeze last month on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, has demanded that government lawyers “fully explain” why the administration began accepting applications for the program earlier than they had indicated.

The hearing is one more step in what is expected to be a long legal battle over an issue that has divided Democrats and Republicans and will be a focus in the 2016 presidential campaign. Legal experts predict that the case will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court, but not before delaying a signature executive effort by Obama in the final two years of his presidency.

The administration wants to move the case along in hopes of prevailing in court and implementing the immigration plan while Obama is still in office.

Obama announced in November that he was using his executive power to grant three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to about 4 million adults who are parents of U.S. citizens and have lived in the country for at least five years. He said the program was simply an extension of his authority to prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no practical way to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

But Hanen ordered the freeze Feb. 16 after Texas and 25 other states sued to halt the program, arguing that Obama had overstepped his constitutional authority by acting without congressional approval. The states also said the immigration plan would impose an unfair financial burden on them.

On Feb. 23, the administration asked Hanen to lift his own injunction and allow the president’s immigration initiatives to proceed. California, New York, Illinois and 11 other states — many with the highest populations of immigrants eligible for Obama’s program — asked a federal appeals court March 12 to lift Hanen’s freeze, saying the states cannot interfere with federal immigration policy.

Those states also argued that Obama’s plan would actually benefit individual states in the form of increased tax revenue from more workers, as well as stronger families. The motion filed by the states called Hanen’s order “unprecedented and wrong.”

The majority of immigrants eligible for “deferred action” live in those 14 states — 1.5 million in California, 338,000 in New York and 280,000 in Illinois.

Texas, however, has the second-most eligible immigrants, with 743,000, according to Migration Policy Institute estimates.

Hanen, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, has expressed hostility toward executive actions. He has also indicated that he sympathizes with claims by Texas and the other 25 states that the immigration plan would impose financial hardships such as the costs of issuing driver’s licenses.

“There will be no effective way of putting the toothpaste back in the tube’’ if the government begins granting immigrants deferred status, Hanen wrote in his opinion blocking the plan.

Hanen’s ruling came two days before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was set to start accepting applications for the program.

Obama’s plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, would offer three-year work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal records.

DAPA would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Obama said at the time that he would issue the same protections to a group of immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. About 300,000 more people would be eligible under the expanded eligibility rules; the Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin accepting applications from those people starting Feb. 18.

However, the department also said the change from two years of protection to three years would take effect before that.

The current dispute in court in Brownsville is over what Justice Department lawyers told the judge during recent hearings as scheduling matters were discussed. In January, government lawyers said nothing would be happening before Feb. 18.

This month, government lawyers disclosed to Hanen that, in what they called “an abundance of caution,” the government had been granting the three-year permits since November to DACA applicants who qualified under the 2012 rules. The talk of the Feb. 18 date “may have led to confusion,” six Justice Department lawyers wrote in a legal brief.

Lawyers for Texas and the other states said the actions were “difficult to square” with the government lawyers’ earlier statements in the case.

The administration is eager to move on and make its case to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. It has asked the appellate court for a decision on the stay within 14 days and for arguments on the constitutional issues in the case to be held by June.

But the matter remains in Hanen’s court for now, and lawyers for the 26 states have asked permission to look further into the administration’s actions on the immigration program.

Follow @davidzucchino for national news.

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-obama-hearing-20150318-story.html?track=rss
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Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge

The Obama administration heads back into federal court before a skeptical judge here Thursday in an attempt to revive the president’s plan to shield up to 5 million people from the threat of deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen of Texas, who ordered a freeze last month on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, has demanded that government lawyers “fully explain” why the administration began accepting applications for the program earlier than they had indicated.

The hearing is one more step in what is expected to be a long legal battle over an issue that has divided Democrats and Republicans and will be a focus in the 2016 presidential campaign. Legal experts predict that the case will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court, but not before delaying a signature executive effort by Obama in the final two years of his presidency.

The administration wants to move the case along in hopes of prevailing in court and implementing the immigration plan while Obama is still in office.

Obama announced in November that he was using his executive power to grant three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to about 4 million adults who are parents of U.S. citizens and have lived in the country for at least five years. He said the program was simply an extension of his authority to prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no practical way to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

But Hanen ordered the freeze Feb. 16 after Texas and 25 other states sued to halt the program, arguing that Obama had overstepped his constitutional authority by acting without congressional approval. The states also said the immigration plan would impose an unfair financial burden on them.

On Feb. 23, the administration asked Hanen to lift his own injunction and allow the president’s immigration initiatives to proceed. California, New York, Illinois and 11 other states — many with the highest populations of immigrants eligible for Obama’s program — asked a federal appeals court March 12 to lift Hanen’s freeze, saying the states cannot interfere with federal immigration policy.

Those states also argued that Obama’s plan would actually benefit individual states in the form of increased tax revenue from more workers, as well as stronger families. The motion filed by the states called Hanen’s order “unprecedented and wrong.”

The majority of immigrants eligible for “deferred action” live in those 14 states — 1.5 million in California, 338,000 in New York and 280,000 in Illinois.

Texas, however, has the second-most eligible immigrants, with 743,000, according to Migration Policy Institute estimates.

Hanen, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, has expressed hostility toward executive actions. He has also indicated that he sympathizes with claims by Texas and the other 25 states that the immigration plan would impose financial hardships such as the costs of issuing driver’s licenses.

“There will be no effective way of putting the toothpaste back in the tube’’ if the government begins granting immigrants deferred status, Hanen wrote in his opinion blocking the plan.

Hanen’s ruling came two days before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was set to start accepting applications for the program.

Obama’s plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, would offer three-year work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal records.

DAPA would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Obama said at the time that he would issue the same protections to a group of immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. About 300,000 more people would be eligible under the expanded eligibility rules; the Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin accepting applications from those people starting Feb. 18.

However, the department also said the change from two years of protection to three years would take effect before that.

The current dispute in court in Brownsville is over what Justice Department lawyers told the judge during recent hearings as scheduling matters were discussed. In January, government lawyers said nothing would be happening before Feb. 18.

This month, government lawyers disclosed to Hanen that, in what they called “an abundance of caution,” the government had been granting the three-year permits since November to DACA applicants who qualified under the 2012 rules. The talk of the Feb. 18 date “may have led to confusion,” six Justice Department lawyers wrote in a legal brief.

Lawyers for Texas and the other states said the actions were “difficult to square” with the government lawyers’ earlier statements in the case.

The administration is eager to move on and make its case to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. It has asked the appellate court for a decision on the stay within 14 days and for arguments on the constitutional issues in the case to be held by June.

But the matter remains in Hanen’s court for now, and lawyers for the 26 states have asked permission to look further into the administration’s actions on the immigration program.

Follow @davidzucchino for national news.

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-obama-hearing-20150318-story.html?track=rss
Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge
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Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge

The Obama administration heads back into federal court before a skeptical judge here Thursday in an attempt to revive the president’s plan to shield up to 5 million people from the threat of deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen of Texas, who ordered a freeze last month on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, has demanded that government lawyers “fully explain” why the administration began accepting applications for the program earlier than they had indicated.

The hearing is one more step in what is expected to be a long legal battle over an issue that has divided Democrats and Republicans and will be a focus in the 2016 presidential campaign. Legal experts predict that the case will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court, but not before delaying a signature executive effort by Obama in the final two years of his presidency.

The administration wants to move the case along in hopes of prevailing in court and implementing the immigration plan while Obama is still in office.

Obama announced in November that he was using his executive power to grant three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to about 4 million adults who are parents of U.S. citizens and have lived in the country for at least five years. He said the program was simply an extension of his authority to prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no practical way to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

But Hanen ordered the freeze Feb. 16 after Texas and 25 other states sued to halt the program, arguing that Obama had overstepped his constitutional authority by acting without congressional approval. The states also said the immigration plan would impose an unfair financial burden on them.

On Feb. 23, the administration asked Hanen to lift his own injunction and allow the president’s immigration initiatives to proceed. California, New York, Illinois and 11 other states — many with the highest populations of immigrants eligible for Obama’s program — asked a federal appeals court March 12 to lift Hanen’s freeze, saying the states cannot interfere with federal immigration policy.

Those states also argued that Obama’s plan would actually benefit individual states in the form of increased tax revenue from more workers, as well as stronger families. The motion filed by the states called Hanen’s order “unprecedented and wrong.”

The majority of immigrants eligible for “deferred action” live in those 14 states — 1.5 million in California, 338,000 in New York and 280,000 in Illinois.

Texas, however, has the second-most eligible immigrants, with 743,000, according to Migration Policy Institute estimates.

Hanen, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, has expressed hostility toward executive actions. He has also indicated that he sympathizes with claims by Texas and the other 25 states that the immigration plan would impose financial hardships such as the costs of issuing driver’s licenses.

“There will be no effective way of putting the toothpaste back in the tube’’ if the government begins granting immigrants deferred status, Hanen wrote in his opinion blocking the plan.

Hanen’s ruling came two days before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was set to start accepting applications for the program.

Obama’s plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, would offer three-year work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal records.

DAPA would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Obama said at the time that he would issue the same protections to a group of immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. About 300,000 more people would be eligible under the expanded eligibility rules; the Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin accepting applications from those people starting Feb. 18.

However, the department also said the change from two years of protection to three years would take effect before that.

The current dispute in court in Brownsville is over what Justice Department lawyers told the judge during recent hearings as scheduling matters were discussed. In January, government lawyers said nothing would be happening before Feb. 18.

This month, government lawyers disclosed to Hanen that, in what they called “an abundance of caution,” the government had been granting the three-year permits since November to DACA applicants who qualified under the 2012 rules. The talk of the Feb. 18 date “may have led to confusion,” six Justice Department lawyers wrote in a legal brief.

Lawyers for Texas and the other states said the actions were “difficult to square” with the government lawyers’ earlier statements in the case.

The administration is eager to move on and make its case to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. It has asked the appellate court for a decision on the stay within 14 days and for arguments on the constitutional issues in the case to be held by June.

But the matter remains in Hanen’s court for now, and lawyers for the 26 states have asked permission to look further into the administration’s actions on the immigration program.

Follow @davidzucchino for national news.

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-obama-hearing-20150318-story.html?track=rss
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Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge

The Obama administration heads back into federal court before a skeptical judge here Thursday in an attempt to revive the president’s plan to shield up to 5 million people from the threat of deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen of Texas, who ordered a freeze last month on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, has demanded that government lawyers “fully explain” why the administration began accepting applications for the program earlier than they had indicated.

The hearing is one more step in what is expected to be a long legal battle over an issue that has divided Democrats and Republicans and will be a focus in the 2016 presidential campaign. Legal experts predict that the case will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court, but not before delaying a signature executive effort by Obama in the final two years of his presidency.

The administration wants to move the case along in hopes of prevailing in court and implementing the immigration plan while Obama is still in office.

Obama announced in November that he was using his executive power to grant three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to about 4 million adults who are parents of U.S. citizens and have lived in the country for at least five years. He said the program was simply an extension of his authority to prioritize immigration enforcement; the administration says there is no practical way to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

But Hanen ordered the freeze Feb. 16 after Texas and 25 other states sued to halt the program, arguing that Obama had overstepped his constitutional authority by acting without congressional approval. The states also said the immigration plan would impose an unfair financial burden on them.

On Feb. 23, the administration asked Hanen to lift his own injunction and allow the president’s immigration initiatives to proceed. California, New York, Illinois and 11 other states — many with the highest populations of immigrants eligible for Obama’s program — asked a federal appeals court March 12 to lift Hanen’s freeze, saying the states cannot interfere with federal immigration policy.

Those states also argued that Obama’s plan would actually benefit individual states in the form of increased tax revenue from more workers, as well as stronger families. The motion filed by the states called Hanen’s order “unprecedented and wrong.”

The majority of immigrants eligible for “deferred action” live in those 14 states — 1.5 million in California, 338,000 in New York and 280,000 in Illinois.

Texas, however, has the second-most eligible immigrants, with 743,000, according to Migration Policy Institute estimates.

Hanen, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, has expressed hostility toward executive actions. He has also indicated that he sympathizes with claims by Texas and the other 25 states that the immigration plan would impose financial hardships such as the costs of issuing driver’s licenses.

“There will be no effective way of putting the toothpaste back in the tube’’ if the government begins granting immigrants deferred status, Hanen wrote in his opinion blocking the plan.

Hanen’s ruling came two days before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was set to start accepting applications for the program.

Obama’s plan would grant three years’ protection from deportation to up to 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally. The largest part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, would offer three-year work permits to parents of citizens and other legal residents. It would not be open to recent arrivals or to people with serious criminal records.

DAPA would affect more than 4 million people who have lived in the United States for at least five years and are the parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Obama said at the time that he would issue the same protections to a group of immigrants who came here as young people, an expansion of 2012’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. About 300,000 more people would be eligible under the expanded eligibility rules; the Department of Homeland Security later announced it would begin accepting applications from those people starting Feb. 18.

However, the department also said the change from two years of protection to three years would take effect before that.

The current dispute in court in Brownsville is over what Justice Department lawyers told the judge during recent hearings as scheduling matters were discussed. In January, government lawyers said nothing would be happening before Feb. 18.

This month, government lawyers disclosed to Hanen that, in what they called “an abundance of caution,” the government had been granting the three-year permits since November to DACA applicants who qualified under the 2012 rules. The talk of the Feb. 18 date “may have led to confusion,” six Justice Department lawyers wrote in a legal brief.

Lawyers for Texas and the other states said the actions were “difficult to square” with the government lawyers’ earlier statements in the case.

The administration is eager to move on and make its case to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. It has asked the appellate court for a decision on the stay within 14 days and for arguments on the constitutional issues in the case to be held by June.

But the matter remains in Hanen’s court for now, and lawyers for the 26 states have asked permission to look further into the administration’s actions on the immigration program.

Follow @davidzucchino for national news.

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-obama-hearing-20150318-story.html?track=rss
Why Obama's stalled immigration plan is back before a skeptical Texas judge
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Van Nuys man convicted of practicing immigration law without a license

A Van Nuys man will serve time in jail after he was convicted of practicing immigration law without a license, the Los Angeles city attorney’s office said Wednesday.

Jesus Lozano, 52, was the target of an undercover investigation as part of a new city-county crackdown on immigration scams.  He had been served with a permanent injunction in 2003 to halt such activities.

City Atty. Mike Feuer, whose office filed charges against Lozano, said the conviction “sends a strong message that we will prosecute those who prey on the immigrant community to the fullest extent of the law.”

According to Feuer’s office, Lozano was convicted Tuesday after entering a plea of no contest on three criminal counts, including the unauthorized practice of law, violation of the Immigration Consultant Act, and violation of a permanent injunction. 

Sentencing for Lozano was delayed for three months to allow the city attorney’s office to identify the amount of restitution owed to victims. As part of the deal, Lozano will serve at least 90 days in jail and be placed on three years’ probation, Feuer’s office said. 

Additionally, the California State Bar will assume control of Lozano’s business to contact victims and return client files.

Lozano was subject to a permanent injunction for the unlicensed practice of immigration law in 2003 after a civil lawsuit. Since then, he has been found in contempt of court on two separate occasions for violating the injunction.

The recent investigation began after Los Angeles County officials received a complaint that Lozano had not stopped giving legal advice. Undercover investigators with the county’s Department of Consumer Affairs visited Lozano’s office in Van Nuys in December and recorded him giving legal advice, Feuer said. 

Rigo Reyes, chief of investigations at the Department of Consumer Affairs, said there may be as many as 2,500 people unlawfully providing immigration advice in California, often to the detriment of their clients’ cases. 

Some promise to help immigrants get work permits, file asylum claims or apply for other types of relief without actually doing any work, or doing it improperly, he said.

Many claim to be licensed attorneys but are actually state-accredited immigration consultants, who are permitted only to translate answers on immigration forms. Others are rogue public notaries who take advantage of the Spanish word for “notary,” which means “lawyer” in some parts of Latin America.

Twitter: @katelinthicum

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

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Germany saw sharpest immigration rise in years in 2014

BERLIN (Reuters) – The number of foreigners living in Germany grew at the fastest rate in more than two decades last year, the Statistics office said on Monday, data that is likely to fuel an already heated debate on immigration.

Figures showed an increase of 519,340 people, or 6.8 percent, from a year earlier, many of them Syrians fleeing war and Romanians and Bulgarians seeking work — marking a second year in a row of record immigration in Europe’s largest economy.

Concerns about immigration has increased support for right-wing parties, including the new Alternative for Germany (AfD), and grassroots movements such as PEGIDA (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West), which held large rallies in the eastern city of Dresden late last year.

“So far there have only been two years where the number of foreigners in Germany saw a stronger rise than in 2014 — namely in 1992, by 613,500, and in 1991, by 539,800,” the Statistics Office said. Germany took in people fleeing ethnic violence in the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s.

The total number of foreigners registered by the end of 2014 was 8.2 million, the highest since records began in 1967, in a country of just over 80 million people whose population and workforce is aging and shrinking more than any major economy save Japan.

Polls show most Germans think Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is paying too little attention to worries about incomers.

But organizations and politicians have also been coming out to defend Germany’s record on immigration. Many of PEGIDA’s rallies outside Dresden were dwarfed by gatherings of tens of thousands insisting that Germany welcomes immigrants.

Germany saw record immigration levels in 2013, confirming its status as the second-top global destination for emigrants after the United States.

Almost 60 percent of the newly-registered immigrants came from EU member states. The number of Romanians increased by 87,945, or 32.9 percent, and the number of Bulgarians by 36,435, or 24.8 percent, after their populations gained the right to work across the European Union.

Romania overtook Poland as the biggest single source of new immigrants but Syria was a close third, with a 107.7 percent rise in the number of people seeking refuge in Germany. The number of new Syrian immigrants in 2014 was 61,295.

(Reporting by Stephen Brown and Rene Wagner; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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Immigration deny employers of illegals in Cameron Highlands escape action – Bernama

The Immigration Department has denied allegations by the Regional Environmental Awareness Cameron Highlands (REACH) that only illegal immigrants were detained in Cameron Highlands, but their employers got off scott free.

Immigration director-general Datuk Mustafa Ibrahim (pic) pointed out that 25 employers of illegals had been detained as of February, since the department’s integrated operation was implemented in December 2014.

He said of the total, one employer was charged, three were still being investigated, 14 were compounded RM265,000 and seven, freed.

“A total of 50 premises were inspected during the period and 1,172 illegals were detained,” he told Bernama today.

REACH president R. Ramakrishnan, in a local newspaper report today, questioned why no action was taken against employers of illegals who were detained to date.

He was also quoted in the report as claiming the possibility of masterminds who had leaked information on the operations of the department.

“Almost daily, there will be enforcement operations to arrest illegals working illegally in the highlands and this is proven when the department is seen detaining foreign nationals.

“However, we have not heard or seen the employers protecting the illegals being arrested or charged.

“Sometimes, before the enforcement authorities arrive at a location, some illegals have made their escape due to information leakage,” said Ramakrishnan in the report.

Mustafa, in the meantime, also questioned REACH’s statement which he regarded as confusing the people, and created a negative perception of the department.

“Where did the REACH president obtain his information. I am not answering defensively but with facts. I must respond. Otherwise, the public will consider the statement of the president of REACH as accurate,” he added. – Bernama, March 15, 2015.

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