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Topic: Deportation


In the News (Sat 2 Jun 12)

  
  Deportation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Deportation is the expelling of someone from a country.
In general, deportation is reserved for foreigners who have committed serious crimes, or entered the country illegally, or are wanted in another country (see extradition).
Deportation is generally done directly by the government's executive apparatus rather than by order or authority of a court, and as such is often subject to a simpler legal process (or none), with reduced or no right to trial, legal representation or appeal.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Deportation   (154 words)

  
 deportation on Encyclopedia.com
The class of deportable aliens was subsequently enlarged several times, coming to include persons who before their entry into the United States were insane, feeble-minded, illiterate, or diseased in various ways.
Celebrations for the anniversary of deportation of Chechen and Ingoush populations by Stalin in 1944.
Congress during anniversary of deportation of Chechen and Ingoush populations by Stalin in 1944.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/d1/deportat.asp   (753 words)

  
 B'Tselem - Legal basis for deportation
Palestinians from the Occupied Territories are deported pursuant to the authority of regulation 112 of the Defense (Emergency) Regulations, 1945.
The deportation order is based on the sole discretion of the military commander, without the deportee having been convicted of any offense and without prior judicial hearing in which evidence against him is presented to a judge.
Deportation is not allowed to serve as punishment for criminal offenses, since such punishment lies within the arena of the judicial system.
www.btselem.org /english/Deportation/Legal_Basis.asp   (620 words)

  
 B'Tselem - The Mass Deportation of 1992
The cabinet's decision and the deportation order issued pursuant to it state that the deportation is to be carried out immediately without granting the deportees the right to be heard prior to execution of the deportation.
However, given that the deportation was grounded in regulation 112 of the Defense (Emergency) Regulations of 1945 as well, the deportation was valid.
The deportation was carried out according to unclear and sweeping criteria, and not on a specific act performed by the particular individual.
www.btselem.org /english/Deportation/1992_Mass_Deportation.asp   (1329 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Many of the victims were deported from nearby ghettos, some as early as December 1941, even before the Wannsee meeting.
SS began in earnest to empty the ghettos, however, in the summer of 1942.
The German Foreign Ministry succeeded in pressuring most governments of occupied and allied nations to assist the Germans in the deportation of Jews living in their countries.
www.ushmm.org /outreach/deport.htm   (321 words)

  
 Why Deportation is Wrong
Over 50% of Cambodians with deportation orders are the main income earners for their families so deportation push families further into poverty.
Most Cambodians with deportation orders arrived in the U.S. between the ages of 2-10 years old, andhave lived in this country for over 20 years; they speak limited Khmer and are not used to the culture of Cambodia.
Before 1996, a deportable crime was murder or rape, or any crime with a sentence of over 5 years in prison.
www.aamovement.net /community/nodeport.htm   (288 words)

  
 Deportation Lawyer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Chief among these are (1) waivers of excludability and deportability; (2) cancellation of removal for permanent residents; (3) cancellation of removal for non-permanent residents; (4) suspension of deportation; (5) adjustment of status to permanent residence; (5) asylum and withholding of deportation; (6) legalization and registry and, if all else fails, (7) voluntary departure.
A deportable alien who is the parent, spouse, widow or child of a U.S. citizen may be eligible to apply to the Judge to adjust his status to that of a lawful permanent resident.
Voluntary departure is available to aliens who are not deportable on aggravated grounds, who have the means to pay for their departure from the U.S., who agree to depart within a period of time granted by the Immigration Judge, and who can establish good moral character during the previous five-year period.
www.byrdassociates.com /deportation.html   (1801 words)

  
 Article71   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Deportation is indeed a measure applied to rid the state of statutorily defined categories of deportable foreign nationals.
A state may deport a foreign national if, for instance, it has reason that the foreign national acted prejudicial to the interest of the state, or on mere suspicion that he is likely to act or is acting prejudicially to the interest and security of the state.
In case a deportation order is issued, the Immigration Department is required to inform the reason for such deportation, as well as the date and the route by which the deportee is required to leave Ethiopia.
www.telecom.net.et /~walta/conflict/html/article71.html   (4632 words)

  
 RENEWING THE CALL: IMMIGRANTS' RIGHT TO APPOINTED COUNSEL IN DEPORTATION PROCEEDINGS
Deportation is a significant deprivation of liberty—both scholars and courts have likened it to criminal punishment.
Before examining the nature of deportation proceedings and the procedural protections currently in place, it is important to note that several studies have indicated that representation in immigration proceedings does affect the outcome.
Recognizing the complexity of immigration law and the deportation process is integral to evaluating the probable value of counsel in a deportation proceeding.
www.bc.edu /bc_org/avp/law/lwsch/journals/bctwj/20_2/04_TXT.htm   (6775 words)

  
 DEPORTATION AND JUSTICE: A CONSTITUTIONAL DIALOGUE
Under current statutory law, permanent resident noncitizens may be deported for crimes that were not grounds for deportation when they were committed and there may be no possibility of mercy or humanitarian relief.
If proportionality is a fundamental component of justice, as I believe it is, then it is unfair and unjust to deport and banish for life a long-term legal permanent resident with family here and no contacts in her country of birth who commits a single minor crime.
The deportation of long-term, legal permanent residents for post-entry conduct is imposed as a direct consequence of a prior “bad” act.
www.bc.edu /bc_org/avp/law/lwsch/journals/bclawr/41_4/02_TXT.htm   (4677 words)

  
 ILW.COM -Delegation of Authority to INS to Terminate Deportation and Initiate Removal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Furthermore, a deportation proceeding shall not be reopened for the purpose of repapering.
In any case where a deportation proceeding is terminated for the purpose of repapering, the Service shall then expeditiously commence removal proceedings by preparing and serving a Notice to Appear on the alien and filing the Notice to Appear with the Immigration Court.
The previous deportation proceeding before the Immigration Court or the Board shall be terminated as a matter of law on the date the Service files the Notice to Appear with the Immigration Court.
www.ilw.com /lawyers/immigdaily/News/2000,1201-Authority.shtm   (3053 words)

  
 Immigration and deportation attorneys by GotTrouble.com
Even if a person has been admitted to the U.S., he may still be forced by the INS to leave the country, through a procedure known as "removal" or "deportation." The basis for removal depends on whether the person is seeking admission or whether he is being removed after entering the country.
Someone who arrives without travel documents or with questionable documents and is not seeking asylum and is not a permanent resident or does not claim to be a U.S. citizen will likely be turned away without more than a quick interview with an immigration officer.
These criminal provisions of the immigration laws require that the INS place its highest priority on the deportation of persons in state and federal prisons, especially for violent crimes.
www.gottrouble.com /legal/immigration/deportation.html   (428 words)

  
 washingtonpost.com: A Secret Deportation Of Terror Suspects
The CIA refers to such cases as "extraordinary renditions," the fast and forcible transfer of foreign terrorism suspects to other countries, often their places of origin, where they can be detained or interrogated more freely, often without all the legal protections available in the country they left.
Critics have charged that the practice is vulnerable to abuse, noting that suspects are usually deported to countries that are friendly to U.S. intelligence agencies but also have records of permitting torture or other human rights violations.
The Swedish government, for instance, agreed to deport the suspects only after receiving assurances from Egypt that they would be given fair trials and "not be subjected to inhuman treatment or punishment of any kind," according to a confidential memo prepared by Swedish diplomats six days before the expulsion.
www.washingtonpost.com /ac2/wp-dyn/A11976-2004Jul24?language=printer   (2181 words)

  
 Attorney General April 28, 1995 Memorandum on Deportation of criminal Aliens
A stipulated administrative deportation is predicated on the alien's admission of alienage and deportability.
Sample stipulations to administrative deportation for inclusion in plea agreements are attached at Appendices B and C. When administrative deportation is merely a collateral consequence of a guilty plea, the court is not required, pursuant to Rule 11, F.R.Cr.P., to advise a defendant of the possibility of deportation.
If the alien defendant resists or delays deportation at the end of the incarceration period, he may be subject to reincarceration or modification of the conditions of his supervised release.
www.usdoj.gov /ag/readingroom/deportation95.htm   (3842 words)

  
 Bible study resources: exile   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In biblical studies the term "the exile" or "captivity" refers to the deportation of Judah's leaders from Jerusalem in the 6th century.
The estimates of numbers deported vary (Jer 52:28-30 lists three deportations and gives 4,600 as the total exiled from Judah; while 2 Kgs 24:14 claims 10,000 in the first deportation alone).
While it was the deportation of Judah's leaders which marked the Old Testament texts most, when Amos speaks of exile it is deportation from the North by Assyria of which he warns.
www.bible.gen.nz /amos/history/exile.htm   (346 words)

  
 Center for Immigration Studies
They were either deported in absentia or sentenced in a courtroom and then released on their own recognizance pending final deportation, only to disappear back into the woodwork.
The INS sought Short's deportation based on her conviction for a crime of moral turpitude (in other words, a crime that is inherently base, vile, or depraved).
Intended as a cost-saving measure to streamline the deportation process, voluntary departure allows aliens to enter into an agreement to leave the United States on their own volition and to avoid the consequences of a formal order of removal (such as being barred from re-entering the country for 10 years).
www.cis.org /articles/2002/back1002.html   (3533 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: French Revolution
The Assembly replied by the Decree of 27 May, 1792, declaring that all non-juring priests might be deported by the directory of their department at the request of twenty citizens, and if they should return after expulsion they would be liable to ten years of imprisonment.
The measures taken by the Convention to substitute the Revolutionary calendar for the old Christian calendar, and the decrees ordering the municipalities to seize and melt down the bells and treasures of the churches, proved that certain currents prevailed tending to the dechristianization of France.
At the request of the Paris Commune, Gobel, Bishop of Paris, and thirteen of his vicars resigned at the bar of the Convention (7 November) and their example was followed by several constitutional bishops.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/13009a.htm   (7795 words)

  
 Criminal Resource Manual 1921 Stipulated Administrative Deportation in Plea Agreements   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
If deportability will be based on the conviction to which the alien will plead guilty, the alien must accept the deportation order at the time of sentencing.
Sample stipulations to administrative deportation for inclusion in plea agreements are attached at Appendices B 1932 and C 1933.
When administrative deportation is merely a collateral consequence of a guilty plea, the court is not required, pursuant to Rule 11, F.R.Cr.P., to advise a defendant of the possibility of deportation.
www.usdoj.gov /usao/eousa/foia_reading_room/usam/title9/crm01921.htm   (735 words)

  
 Deportation
Deportation is the procedure utilized by the U. Immigration and Naturalization Service to try to expel certain aliens from the United States.
Among the types of individuals routinely subjected to deportation proceedings are people who illegally entered the United States or people who, although they entered legally, have subsequently violated their status by working without permission or remaining longer than permitted.
The outcome of a deportation hearing may depend on many different factors, for example: the length of time the alien has resided in the U. S., his family ties to the U.S., the political situation in his home country, his prior immigration history and his prior criminal history.
www.chicagobar.org /public/diallaw/49.asp   (596 words)

  
 Gallery - Deportation - Photos
In March, 1942, the Jews of the Lublin Province of Poland are deported to the Belzec death camp.
Dutch Jews, seized in their homes, are brought by truck to the Muiderpoort railroad station in the Polderweg district to be deported to Westerbork, 1943.
Jews at the Muiderpoort railroad station in the Polderweg district before their deportation to the Westerbork transit camp.
fcit.coedu.usf.edu /holocaust/resource/gallery/deport.htm   (283 words)

  
 deportation - DR1 Forums
If they were deported from the U.S. due to the law about deportation of people who have been convicted of felony crimes and have served their time and depending on their crime the dominican government may let them go.
If someone is deported just because they did not come to the US through the "proper" channels they fly back to the D.R. and go home.
This person is being deported for a felony crime not involving drugs or murder or anything like that.
www.dr1.com /forums/showthread.php?t=12742   (462 words)

  
 The Herald News - News - 11/11/2002 - Law change hastens deportation
He said a 1996 law changing the country's policies on deportation of foreign nationals found guilty of a crime has made it virtually impossible for foreign-born American residents to fight deportation.
The law also made deportation retroactive, meaning if a foreign national living in America was found guilty of a crime prior to the law change, they too, would be subject to deportation.
The various aspects of being deported from what one considers their home is an extremely difficult experience, but Moniz said what it does to the families may be even worse.
zwire.com /site/news.cfm?newsid=6019931&BRD=1710&PAG=461&...&rfi=6   (829 words)

  
 PROPOSED RULE WOULD RESTORE RELIEF TO MANY IN DEPORTATION PROCEEDINGS
Before April 24, 1996, permanent residents in deportation proceedings could request a waiver of deportation, known as a section 212(c) hardship waiver after its section in the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Shortly thereafter, the Attorney General released an opinion, Matter of Soriano, in which she held that section 440(d) applied to all aliens in deportation proceedings, regardless of when their criminal conduct occurred, or when they had sought the waiver.
Because the INS is bound by the decisions of federal courts, and because the decisions of a federal court are binding only in the area in which it has jurisdiction, there is no uniformity in the treatment of this issue.
www.visalaw.com /00jul3/4jul300.html   (696 words)

  
 ei: Stop the Deportation of Palestinian Refugees from Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In response, the Palestinian refugees facing deportation have organized as the Coalition Against the Deportation of Palestinian Refugees and are calling for support and solidarity from groups, organizations and individuals in Canada and throughout the world for their campaign against deportation.
The Electronic Initifada in cooperation with the Coalition Against the Deportation of Palestinian Refugees [http://refugees.resist.ca] have outlined various ways in which you can support the struggle against Palestinian deportations in Canada and also apply pressure on the Canadian government to accept the demands of the Palestinian refugees.
You can also organize events focused on the struggle against Palestinian deportations from Canada, members of the Coalition Against the Deportation of Palestinian Refugees are able to present their struggle publicly.
electronicintifada.net /v2/article3417.shtml   (1171 words)

  
 Bisbee Deportation of 1917
The Bisbee Deportation of 1917 was an event specific to Arizona that influenced the labor movement throughout the United States.
This site is a research-based collection of primary and secondary sources for the study of the deportation of over 1,000 striking miners from Bisbee on 12 July, 1917.
Materials include I.W.W. publications, personal recollections, newspaper articles, court records, government reports, correspondence, and journal articles that are part of the collections of three libraries: The University of Arizona Library, the Arizona Historical Society, Tucson, Arizona, and the Sharlot Hall Museum, Prescott, Arizona.
www.library.arizona.edu /exhibits/bisbee/index.html   (134 words)

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