糖心原创

CGRS, ACLU Succeed in Protecting Asylum Seekers

A federal appeals court has聽聽Trump administration policies that sought to gut protections for asylum seekers fleeing domestic violence and gangs.

The (CGRS) and the American Civil Liberties Union challenged the policies that sought to speedily send women, children and other asylum seekers back to countries where they faced brutal violence and death. The U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., today upheld key aspects of a lower court ruling against the administration. The case is聽Grace v. Barr.

Photo of Professor Karen Musalo

Professor Karen Musalo

鈥淥nce again the courts have struck down the Trump administration鈥檚 policies, which have the single-minded intent to deny refugee protection to those fleeing inconceivable harms,鈥 said Professor Karen Musalo, Director of CGRS. 鈥淲e are heartened by the court鈥檚 clear pronouncement that asylum claims of women fleeing domestic violence, and those fleeing gangs, are not foreclosed from protection under our laws.鈥

The appeals court reinstated two aspects of the Trump policy after the government conceded that such policies should not be read to foreclose successful claims in cases of women fleeing domestic violence or gang violence.

Cody Wofsy, an attorney with the ACLU鈥檚 Immigrants鈥 Rights Project, who argued the case, called ita major defeat for the聽administration鈥檚 assault on asylum rights and the law.鈥

The plaintiffs include women who have endured extensive persecution in the form of sexual and physical violence. Fearing they would be seriously harmed or killed, they sought refuge in the U.S., many of them with their young children. But under the new policies, even though government officials found the accounts truthful, they concluded the women did not have a 鈥渃redible fear of persecution鈥 under the new heightened screening policies and ordered them to be sent back to the countries where they face grave harm.

Blaine Bookey

Blaine Bookey, CGRS Legal Director

鈥淥ur plaintiffs sought refuge in the United States after enduring unimaginable horrors in their home countries. Today鈥檚 decision ensures that the administration cannot just change the rules of the game with the stroke of a pen and deny them the protections to which they are entitled,鈥澛爏aid CGRS Legal Director .聽鈥淚mportantly, this ruling recognizes that women and others fleeing domestic violence and gang brutality cannot be cast aside as undeserving and must have their claims considered fairly, on a case-by-case basis.鈥

The ACLU and CGRS Aug. 7, 2018. At issue were the Administration鈥檚 new 鈥渆xpedited removal鈥 policies put forth by Attorney General Jeff Sessions that instruct asylum officers to 鈥済enerally鈥 deny such claims 鈥 calling them purely 鈥減ersonal鈥 鈥 as well as apply erroneous legal standards, and ignore contrary federal court precedents. The policies undermine the fundamental human rights of women, contradicting decades of settled domestic and international law recognizing gender-based persecution as a basis for asylum. They also impermissibly undermine claims involving gang violence.

Plaintiffs include:

  • 鈥淢ina,鈥 who escaped her home in Honduras after suffering a vicious attack and receiving death threats by a powerful drug-trafficking gang. Gang members targeted Mina and her family after her husband and father-in-law helped a friend escape when the gang was trying to kill him. After murdering her father-in-law and threatening to kill her husband, gang members beat Mina so badly that she could not walk the next day. Her attackers told her they would rape her and mutilate her body if she did not leave town. Mina and her husband fled to the U.S. and sought asylum.
  • 鈥淢aria,鈥 a recently orphaned teenager, fled her home in El Salvador to escape a forced relationship and sexual violence at the hands of a gang member nicknamed 鈥淔.鈥澛燱hen Maria鈥檚 brother-in-law, a member of the same gang, began using her deceased mother鈥檚 house as a gang gathering place, Maria stood up to him because of her strong Christian faith. After she asked her brother-in-law to leave, F. threatened her. He later attempted to sexually assault her days before she fled to the U.S., taking only the clothes on her back.
  • 鈥淕race鈥 fled Guatemala to escape her abusive partner and his violent gang member sons聽from a previous relationship.聽He repeatedly beat and threatened to kill her and her children throughout their 22-year relationship and after she tried to leave him. He also sexually assaulted her and her daughter over many years. Grace is part of an indigenous group that is discriminated against in Guatemala by non-indigenous聽鈥淟adinos.鈥