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PAIFUP

News from the fight for freedom, safety and dignity for all immigrants

detained or facing deportation in Pennsylvania.

March 2023 | Issue 2

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What's Happening?


Within the last two months PAIFUP had 1 client released, thanks to the efforts of PAIFUP legal services, and community organizations. Please read one of those client success stories below.


Also, keep up to date with the latest news by reading some of the articles below. February was Black History month and down below there is an article dedicated to the unique challenges Black immigrants face in this country.

Client Success: T

Thomas was born in Jamaica and came to the Philadelphia area when he was 14 years old as a lawful permanent resident, with his parents. Due to undiagnosed mental illness and physical abuse he suffered as a child, Thomas had difficulty controlling his emotions, leading to contact with the criminal system. This resulted in his incarceration as a juvenile and stemming into his early 20s. While incarcerated, he was placed into removal proceedings, and could not afford an attorney, so he went forward pro se. An immigration judge incorrectly found that he had committed an aggravated felony, denied him the opportunity to apply for relief, and informed him he had no rights in his proceedings, except the right to appeal. Thomas was never asked if he feared return to his home country, though he did. Thomas appealed, but without a lawyer, could not make strong arguments to overcome his removal order, so he awaited release from incarceration to be deported. 

 

Upon release from custody, he was detained by ICE in Pennsylvania, where ICE immediately began to make efforts to deport him. Thomas

got in contact with PAIFUP, and was an assigned an attorney who began

representing him in June 2021. Counsel realized that the Immigration Judge had

made numerous mistakes in his proceeding, and Thomas had a real claim for

relief from removal, especially given his diagnosis of mental illness after his

prior immigration proceedings. As counsel was preparing materials and a motion

to reopen his case to ask for the chance to seek asylum, ICE moved Thomas from

a mental health facility to a detention facility in Georgia, in an effort

deport him. Counsel immediately filed the motion to reopen and an emergency

stay of removal and Thomas was taken off the flight on the morning it was set

to depart.  

 

Ultimately, Thomas’ motion to reopen was granted, and his

case was sent back to the Immigration Court for a competency hearing and then a

final hearing on his asylum claim. All the while he was awaiting his case, his

counsel requested over and over for Thomas to be released from custody, given

that he was not receiving proper medical or mental health care and had been

diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. He was also being held at a

facility known for violating detention standards and failing to provide

adequate mental health and medical care (https://www.oig.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/assets/2022-07/OIG-22-47-July22.pdf). These requests were

repeatedly denied, without explanation from ICE. Because of the facility’s

inability to treat Thomas appropriately, they persistently placed him in

solitary confinement. 

 

The Immigration Court held three long and contentious

hearings on Thomas’ asylum application in the Summer of 2022. Thomas’ PAIFUP

attorney argued that Thomas warranted asylum on the basis of his mental illness.

In support of his claim, counsel recruited two medical doctors and a country

conditions expert, and ensured safeguards were in place to protect Thomas from

being re-traumatized during his case. The government argued that Thomas should

be barred from asylum due to his criminal record. Counsel argued that any

criminal record was mitigated by his mental health conditions, a novel and

un-tested argument based on a newly released decision from the Attorney General

stating that mental health should be taken into consideration where an

individual has mental health conditions. The Immigration Judge agreed with

counsel’s arguments, and granted Thomas asylum in December 2022. A few days

after this grant, Thomas was released to his family in Pennsylvania, where is building

a new life, getting the treatment he needs, and working to give back to his

community. 

 

Thomas credits his PAIFUP attorney with saving his life and believing in him when the system had failed him. He wrote to his attorney after his release: “Words cannot define my appreciation and gratitude . . . Even though there is no way that I can verbalize my thankfulness to you, I must still take a go at it. . . You are a truly a blessing in the skies to me and everyone you deal with. I don’t say this just because of the blessings you have accomplished for me, but I hope you know just much your thoughtfulness is appreciated. Thank you.” 

In Other News

More detentions, deportations, abuse: The challenges Black immigrants face | Opinion

Philadelphia's Black immigrant population has been growing. According to the Pew Research Center, some 120,000 Black immigrants now call Philly home. Since the 1990s, African immigrants have comprised a large portion of this migration, arriving from Liberia, Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, and other countries throughout the continent.

Read More

A Victory for Abolitionists: ICE-Run Immigration Prison Shuts Down Today

Today, advocates across the U.S. are celebrating the end of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) contract with Berks County in Pennsylvania, marking the long-fought closure of the embattled Berks immigration prison (officially known as Berks County Residential Center).

Read More

Nearly 600,000 Migrants Released Inside US Since 2021 With No Immigration Court Date

Nearly 600,000 migrants who crossed the U.S. border since March 2021 have been released into the U.S. without being charged or given a date to appear in court, according to data obtained by NBC News, and thousands have even been dropped from the program that was supposed to track them.

Read More
Catch up on the previous issue here
Questions? Comments? News worth sharing? Send Yomayra Burgos, our PAIFUP coordinator, an email at [email protected].

The Pennsylvania Immigrant Family Unity Project (PAIFUP) is a collaborative of nonprofit organizations in Pennsylvania formed in order to achieve universal representation for detained immigrants facing removal proceedings in PA.