Exclusive: As the U.S. shut down, Trump's legal fight to build wall
ramped up
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[April 17, 2020]
By Jarrett Renshaw
(Reuters) - Even as the Trump
administration was struggling to deal with the coronavirus outbreak, it
was ramping up efforts to seize land along U.S. southern border to build
a wall and fulfill a major campaign promise, a Reuters review of federal
court records shows.
Donald Trump made building the wall a central promise of his 2016
campaign, but those efforts have been plagued by delays and false
promises. Late last year, the administration got more aggressive,
pledging to use the federal courts to seize large swaths of private
land, mostly in Texas.
While most of the U.S. has been slowed by the COVID-19 crisis - which
has infected nearly 650,000 Americans and killed at least 32,000 more -
Trump’s efforts to construct a southern border wall has only gained
steam.
In the past 12 months, the administration opened 41 cases in federal
court to seize land to build a wall along the southern border of Texas.
Nearly half of those cases – 16, or 39 percent - were filed in the past
two months.
The bulk of the new filings came in March, when the administration
opened 12 cases, the most in any month under Trump, a Reuters review of
federal filings found.
The administration wants immediate possession, bypassing traditional
procedural steps and forcing landowners to move more swiftly, records
show.
Advocates for the landowners say the administration is choosing a bad
time to get more aggressive, forcing landowners to choose between
leaving their home to fight the case despite statewide stay-at-home
guidance or lose their property.
Also, a successful defense can be expensive, requiring paid experts,
lawyers and other professionals at a time the U.S. economy is shedding a
record number of jobs.
"The timing, on a human level, is very bad," said David Donatti, an
attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Texas who
represents a family fighting government seizure of their property.
Nayda Alvarez, a 49-year-old public school teacher, was served court
papers in March. She and her extended family - including her elderly
father who suffers from several health issues - live on 6-acre
(2.4-hectare) ranch along the Rio Grande river that the administration
wants to take immediately.
"It's very scary. My hands are tied because we are quarantined and
fighting the federal government, literally," said Alvarez, who is
working with the ACLU and another group, the Texas Civil Rights Project,
in her defense.
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Segments of the first border wall in Texas since President Trump
took office as seen near Donna, Texas, U.S. December 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Veronica G. Cardenas/File Photo
She was preparing to go to federal court on Tuesday, donning a mask
and gloves, but her lawyers were able to delay the hearing until
June.
Unlike in other states, most of the U.S. borderland in Texas is
privately owned, which has delayed wall construction by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers. Federal lawyers have had to comb property
records, track down landowners, make offers to buy the land and — if
owners refuse to sell — file lawsuits to seize the land.
The White House did not respond to requests for comments for this
story.
In recent weeks, Trump has made the case that the global pandemic
only proves the need for stronger borders. On March 12, he retweeted
a follower's commentary linking the health scare to the need for
strong borders and added "We need the Wall more than ever!"
Three Democratic lawmakers representing congressional districts
along the U.S.-Mexico border recently called on the Trump
administration to temporarily pause the legal efforts.
"To put vulnerable families already suffering at disproportionate
rates at this time is simply unconscionable," the lawmakers wrote in
an April 8 letter to the departments of Justice, Defense and
Homeland Security.
Immigration and border security has been a top issue for Republicans
for the last few years. Yet now it appears to be overshadowed by
concerns about healthcare as the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps across the
country.
When asked what they considered to be "most important problem facing
the U.S. today,” 18% of Republicans said healthcare in an April
13-14 Reuters/Ipsos poll, up 3 percentage points from a similar poll
that ran Feb. 19-25, while 15% said it was immigration, down 10
points from the February poll.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, Editing by Soyoung Kim and Jonathan
Oatis)
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