[Ppnews] After 20 years of living hell , the LA8 case is over! WE WON!
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Wed Oct 31 10:56:20 EDT 2007
CHARGES DROPPED IN 20-YEAR OLD DEPORTATION CASE
AGAINST PALESTINIAN ACTIVISTS
Long court battle ends with victory for immigrants
LOS ANGELES The 20-year effort to deport two men over their alleged political
support of Palestinian self-determination
officially came to an end today when the
nations highest administrative body overseeing
immigration cases dismissed all charges
against Khader Hamide and Michel Shehadeh,
members of a group of Palestinian student
activists arrested in January 1987, who became known as the LA8.
The action by the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) closes one of the nations
longest-running and most controversial
deportation cases, one that tested whether
immigrants have the same First Amendment rights as citizens.
Hamide and Shehadeh expressed both relief and
happiness that the case is finally over but
also anger over what they believed to be a
politically motivated, baseless prosecution.
My family and I feel a tremendous amount of
relief today, said Hamide. After 20
years, the nightmare is finally over. I feel
vindicated at long last. This is a victory not
only for us, but for the First Amendment of the
Constitution and for the rights of all
immigrants.
Shehadeh agreed.
I am extremely happy but do have mixed emotions, Shehadeh added. The
government was wrong for twenty one years. They
robbed us, and our families, of the
best and most productive years of our lives. We
are now free to continue living our lives,
acting on our beliefs; raising our families,
supporting our communities, loving our
country, defending justice and the Constitution,
and prospering as good citizens."
The case against the pair began in January, 1987,
when the government arrested them and
six others, who collectively came to be known as
the LA 8, placed them in maximum
security prison, and accused them of having ties
to a faction of the Palestine Liberation
Organization. The government alleged that Hamide and Shehadeh distributed
newspapers, held demonstrations and organized humanitarian aid fundraisers for
Palestinians, and that because these actions
supported the PLO faction, they should be
deported. The men were initially charged with being associated with a Communist
organization, but when a court declared those
charges unconstitutional, the government
filed new charges of material support for a
terrorist group. The case went before the US
Court of Appeals four times, the Supreme Court
once, and the Board of Immigration
Appeals multiple times.
The BIA dismissed the case at the request of the government, which agreed in a
settlement to drop all charges and not to seek
removal of either of the men in the future
based on any of the political activities or
associations at issue in the case. Hamide and
Shehadeh agreed not to apply for citizenship for
three years, and to have several judicial
orders in the case vacated as moot.
Attorneys for the two hailed the governments
decision to drop the case as a victory the
First Amendment rights of all immigrants and a
vindication of their clients actions.
This is a monumental victory for all immigrants
who want to be able to express their
political views and support the lawful activities
of organizations in their home countries
fighting for social or political change, said
Marc Van Der Hout, of the National Lawyers
Guild. Hamide and Shehadeh did nothing more than
advocate for Palestinians right to
a homeland and support charitable causes and
other legal activities in the Occupied
Territories. That should never have been cause
for deportation charges in the first place.
The governments attempt to deport them all these
years marks another shameful period
in our governments history of targeting certain
groups of immigrants for their political
beliefs and activities.
We are overjoyed for our clients, who have spent
twenty years fighting for the right to
stay in this country and speak and associate
freely, said David Cole, a professor at
Georgetown University Law School and volunteer attorney for the Center for
Constitutional rights. And we commend the
administration for recognizing that federal
anti-terrorism resources can be far better spent on other endeavors.
The tipping point came in January 2007, when Immigration Judge Bruce J. Einhorn
dismissed the case finding that the governments
refusal to turn over evidence favorable
to the men violated the pairs right to due
process. The governments refusal to comply
with his disclosure order, Einhorn wrote, is a festering wound on the body of
respondents and an embarrassment to the rule of law.
The case originally involved seven Palestinians
and a Kenyan, the wife of Khader
Hamide. Late last year, Aiad Barakat, one of the
eight, was sworn in as a U.S. citizen in
Los Angeles after federal judge Stephen Wilson
rejected the governments contentions
that he should be denied citizenship for his
political associations. All of the others have
either been granted permanent residency or are on track to becoming permanent
residents.
We are gratified that the government has decided
to terminate this case and to spend its
resources on genuine threats to our national
security, said Ahilan T. Arulanantham, staff
attorney with the ACLU of Southern California.
Hamide and Shehadeh are law-abiding
immigrants who have lived here for more than a
quarter century each and done nothing
wrong. We are glad that they will be able to live
out the rest of their lives in peace in the
country they have called home.
Van Der Hout and Cole have been representing the
immigrants since the case began in
1987 along with Leonard Weinglass of Chicago
Seven fame and investigator Phyllis
Bennis of the National Lawyers Guild.
Center for
Constitutional Rights
National Lawyers
Guild
ACLU of
Southern California
666 Broadway, 7th Floor
New York, NY 10012
Ph. (212) 614-6464
Fax (212) 614-6499
Contact: David Cole,
(202) 662-
9078
or (202) 365-6779
558 Capp Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
Ph. (415) 981-3000
Fax (415)981-3003
Contact: Marc Van Der Hout
415-981-3000
1616 Beverly Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90026
Ph. (213) 977 9500
Fax (213) 250 3919
Contact: Celeste Durant
(213) 977-5252
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415 863-9977
www.Freedomarchives.org
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