A/HRC/7/12/Add.2
page 13
39. In its landmark decision, Zadvydas v. Davis,9 the Supreme Court held that indefinite
immigration detention of non-citizens who have been ordered deported but whose removal is not
reasonably foreseeable would raise serious constitutional problems.
40. Prior to Zadvydas, the Government had a policy of detaining individuals even when there
was virtually no chance they would actually be removed (this has been especially common with
migrants from countries such as Cuba, Iraq, the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Lao People’s
Democratic Republic, the former Soviet Union and Viet Nam). The Government often referred
to these individuals as “lifers”, in recognition of the fact that their detention was indefinite and
potentially permanent. In the aftermath of Zadvydas, new regulations were promulgated in order
to comply with the Supreme Court’s decision. Under these regulations, if the Department of
Homeland Security cannot remove a migrant within the 90-day removal period, the Government
is required to provide a post-order custody review to determine if the individual can be released.
If the individual remains in detention six months after the removal order has become final,
another custody review is to be conducted. Once it is determined that removal is not reasonably
foreseeable, the regulations require the individual to be released under conditions of supervision.
41. Unfortunately, many problems plague the post-order custody review process. For example,
some detainees never receive notice of their 90-day or 6-month custody reviews, and therefore
do not have the opportunity to submit documentation in support of their release. Others never
receive timely custody reviews at either the 90-day or 6-month mark. In addition, decisions to
continue detention are often based on faulty reasoning and erroneous facts, ignore the law
outlined by the Supreme Court in Zadvydas, or are essentially rubber-stamp decisions that fail to
cite any specific evidence in support of their conclusion.
42. Frequently, these decisions ignore documentation (including letters from the detained
individual’s consulate) that proves that there is no significant likelihood of removal in the
reasonably foreseeable future. In other cases, the Department of Homeland Security has failed to
present evidence of the likelihood of removal and instead blames detainees for failing to
facilitate their own removal.
43. The Special Rapporteur notes that according to the law, individuals can be released on
parole regardless of their immigration status. In practice, however, because migrants are not
entitled to a review of their custody by an immigration judge, or are subjected to rubber-stamp
administrative custody review decisions, their detention is essentially mandatory.
44. The Special Rapporteur acknowledges that the mission for the Department of Homeland
Security is to “lead the unified national effort to secure America” through its Immigration and
Customs Enforcement agency (ICE). ICE is the largest investigative branch of the Department of
Homeland Security; and seeks to protect the United States against terrorist attacks by targeting
undocumented immigrants, whom the agency considers to be “the people, money and materials
that support terrorism and other criminal activities”.
9
See footnote 7 above.