DoJ Lays Out Defense of New Ban as Hearings Loom

WASHINGTON (The Washington Post) —

The Justice Department on Monday laid out its first significant legal defense of President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban, arguing in a court filing that the harms opponents say it causes are “speculative” and that the president was well within his authority to issue the directive.

Responding to a lawsuit from the state of Hawaii, Justice Department lawyers asserted that Mr. Trump’s new executive order solved any possible legal problems that came with the first one, because it was narrower in scope and outlined a robust list of people who might be exempted.

“Plaintiffs therefore are not entitled to the sweeping relief they seek,” Justice Department lawyers wrote.

Opponents of Mr. Trump’s executive order have asked federal judges in several states to block the administration from enforcing the directive, and two judges have scheduled hearings Wednesday to hear arguments on the matter. The order – which suspends the U.S.’s refugee program and bars the issuance of new visas to citizens of six Muslim-majority countries – is set to take effect Thursday, unless a court intervenes.

Hawaii was the first state to sue over the directive, arguing the new executive order – much like the old – violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment because it is essentially a Muslim ban, hurts the ability of state businesses and universities to recruit top talent and damages the state’s robust tourism industry.

They pointed particularly to the case of Ismail Elshikh, the imam of the Muslim Association of Hawaii, whose mother-in-law’s application for an immigrant visa was still being processed. Under the new executive order, lawyers for Hawaii said, Mr. Elshikh feared that his mother-in-law would ultimately be banned from entering the United States.

Justice Department lawyers countered that the economic harms alleged by the state were “mere speculation” and that Mr. Elshikh’s mother-in-law had no reason to sue yet because she had not been denied a waiver to come into the country. The new executive order, unlike the old, spelled out a list of people who might be granted exemptions, including those seeking to visit or live with family in the United States.

“The Order applies only to individuals outside the country who do not have a current visa, and even as to them, it sets forth robust waiver provisions,” Justice Department lawyers wrote. “Among other things, therefore, plaintiffs cannot show that any individual whom they seek to protect is in imminent risk of being denied entry due to the Order.”

The state will have to convince a judge that Mr. Trump’s ban is likely to be ultimately found unconstitutional and will impose immediate, irreparable harms unless it is stopped. A hearing in the case is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Eastern time, Wednesday.

Federal judges in Washington state and Maryland are also considering separate challenges to the new ban, and either could preempt the need for action in Hawaii. A hearing in the Maryland case is scheduled for 9:30 a.m., Wednesday, and Washington on Monday formally asked a judge to enforce his freeze of the previous ban on the new one and to schedule a hearing for Tuesday.

“While the new section differs from the original by excluding Iraqis, lawful permanent residents, and visa-holders, it bars entry for virtually all other individuals from the listed countries, including: relatives of U.S. citizens, students who have been admitted to state universities, prospective employees of state universities and private businesses, and many others,” lawyers for the state of Washington wrote. “This Court’s original injunction protected these individuals and institutions, and the Ninth Circuit rejected Defendants’ request to narrow the injunction to exclude them.”

The administration has argued the ban is necessary for national security reasons, though many diplomatic and national security professionals have said they disagree with that assessment, and the new ban would probably not have kept out anyone responsible for a fatal terrorist attack since 2001.

In their filing, Justice Department lawyers pointed to 300 people who entered the United States as refugees and are under investigation for terrorism-related crimes and asserted that hundreds of foreign-born individuals have been convicted of such offenses.

“More fundamentally, plaintiffs miss the point,” Justice Department lawyers wrote. “The Order’s objective is to prevent future terrorist attacks before they occur. And that is precisely why the Order focuses on six countries that Congress and the prior Administration recently determined pose the greatest risk of terrorist infiltration in the future.”

A federal judge in Wisconsin recently blocked the administration from enforcing the ban with respect to one family. In that case, a man who had successfully fled Syria and been granted asylum in the United States sued so that the ban would not be applied to his wife and three-year-old daughter, who are still in Aleppo and have asylum applications being processed.

The judge ruled that the family had “some likelihood of success on the merits” and that the man was “at great risk of suffering irreparable harm” if the order was not blocked, so far as it applied to his family.

“The court appreciates that there may be important differences between the original executive order, and the revised executive order issued on March 6, 2017 – for example, the government points to a new waiver provision,” Judge William Conley wrote. “As the order applies to the plaintiff here, however, the court finds his claims have at least some chance of prevailing for the reasons articulated by other courts.”

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