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Politics : ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION THE FIGHT TO KEEP OUR DEMOCRACY

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To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (2288)8/24/2007 10:25:18 AM
From: Ann Corrigan   of 3197
 
Barletta:Hazleton will not back down-appeals US judge's ruling

Hazleton Standard Speaker

08/24/2007

>HAZLETON — This small city has appealed U.S. District Judge James M. Munley’s ruling that its Illegal Immigration Relief Act is unconstitutional.

The appeal was filed Thursday with the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, Philadelphia.

“I think today further proves that the city of Hazleton is not going to roll over and back down,” Hazleton Mayor Lou Barletta said.

The city is appealing Munley’s main judgement in the case along with several of Munley’s pretrial orders, Barletta said.

“I feel very confident and I’m anxious to move this case on to Philadelphia,” Barletta said.

Hazleton City Attorney Kris Kobach said that it will likely take some time before the case is argued and ruled upon.

Kobach estimated that oral arguments for the appeal would be heard sometime between March and July. Until that time, the city’s attorneys will be busy submitting briefs and additional paperwork.

Once the case is heard, Kobach estimated, it will take anywhere from six months to a year for a decision to be rendered.

“It’s really hard to predict,” Kobach said of the timeline.

Munley issued his main ruling July 26, saying that federal law prohibits the city from enforcing any provisions of the IIRA. The law had proposed a crackdown on landlords and employers who did business with illegal immigrants.

In his 206-page opinion, Munley stated that despite the frustrations felt by the city of Hazleton about federal immigration enforcement, the “nature of the political system in the United States prohibits the city from enacting ordinances that disrupt a carefully drawn federal statutory scheme.”

“We expected that it would be difficult to convince Judge Munley,” Kobach said.

In reference to pretrial orders, Barletta said the city is appealing Munley’s order to keep quiet the identities of the plaintiffs who challenged the IIRA.

“He prohibited the city from learning much from the plaintiffs in the deposition,” Barletta said, referring to those named only as “John Doe” and “Jane Doe.” The American Civil Liberties Union, Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund and the Hazleton Hispanic Business Association were also named as plaintiffs to the IIRA challenge.

“We’re also appealing what we thought was a gag order on the city, which prevented us from talking to the federal government,” Barletta said, referring to the city being prohibited from contacting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforement. “We feel it was a violation of federal law.”<
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