New York mayor criticized for proposed
limits on legal aid to immigrants
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[May 12, 2017]
By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York City public
defenders on Thursday criticized a proposal by Mayor Bill de Blasio to
deny free legal counsel to immigrants in deportation hearings if they
had been convicted of serious crimes in the past, saying the plan would
deny them due process.
In his proposed annual budget, De Blasio allocated $16.4 million to
legal services for immigrant New Yorkers, citing concern about U.S.
President Donald Trump's crackdown on immigrants living in the country
illegally.
Lawyers, local lawmakers and civil rights activists welcomed the funding
proposal, which sharply increases legal aid for immigrants. But they
gathered on the steps of City Hall to criticize a provision they said
would unfairly deprive some people of the right to due process under the
law.
De Blasio's proposal would deny city-funded lawyers to immigrants
previously convicted of one of 170 crimes that the city considers
serious or violent.
Jennifer Friedman, who runs the immigration practice at Bronx Defenders,
said the mayor's plan would create a "two-tier system that treats people
different based on their criminal history."
The funding be in addition to the New York Immigrant Family Unity
Project (NYIFUP), which has been funded by the City Council since 2013
and provides free lawyers to immigrants facing deportation hearings at
the federal immigration court.
In the United States, the right to a lawyer does not extend to federal
immigration hearings which are civil, not criminal, proceedings.
The plan contradicted de Blasio's description of New York as a
"sanctuary city" for immigrants, the public defenders said.
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People rally on the steps of City Hall in Manhattan, New York, U.S.,
May 11, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Seth Stein, a City Hall spokesman, wrote in an email that "the
public should not be expected to foot the bill" for immigrants
convicted of dangerous crimes. "The vast majority of immigrants have
not been convicted of violent crimes," he wrote.
More than 2,000 immigrants have received free lawyers under the
council-funded program, which provides free lawyers regardless of an
immigrant's criminal record, in the four years since it began, Legal
Aid said.
In New York City, immigrants without lawyers managed to overturn a
removal order in court only 3 percent of the time, while those with
lawyers were able to remain in the country 30 percent of the time,
Legal Aid said.
(Editing by Frank McGurty and Cynthia Osterman)
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