Judge
declares Obama immigration action unconstitutional
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[December 17, 2014]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama's new plan to ease the threat of deportation for 4.7 million
undocumented immigrants violates the U.S. Constitution, a federal judge
found on Tuesday, handing down the first legal ruling against the plan.
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The ruling has no immediate impact, with the government saying
there was no reason for Judge Arthur Schwab of the Western District
of Pennsylvania to address the issue in the case, which concerns
42-year-old Honduran immigrant Elionardo Juarez-Escobar.
Schwab is the first judge to rule on the legality of the plan Obama
announced on Nov. 20. The executive action by the Democratic
president is opposed by Republicans and is already subject to other
legal challenges.
Schwab ruled that the executive action violated the U.S.
Constitution's guarantee of separation of powers and the separate
"take care clause," which requires the president to faithfully
execute laws passed by Congress.
Schwab says he ruled on the executive action issue because he
concluded that Juarez-Escobar could be eligible for relief under the
executive action.
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Government lawyers told Schwab that Juarez-Escobar, who has pleaded
guilty to re-entering the country, was not eligible because Obama's
order does not affect criminal proceedings.
(Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Lisa Von Ahn)
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