Sylvester Owinoโs parents raised him as a Christian in Kenya, but he readily admits to straying as a young adult. After emigrating to the United States on a student visa in 1998, Owino had a series of alcohol-related run-ins with the law, including domestic battery and two DUI convictions.
One night in 2003, a drunken Owino gambled away his money, prompting him to wander into a nearby shop at closing and demand cash. No one was injured in the $21 heist, and police apprehended him within minutes. They found no weapon, but Owinoโs victim said he had a knife, and a judge later sentenced him to 36 months in prison for armed robbery.
Upon his release in 2005, Owino was immediately transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody to begin deportation proceedings. A long legal battle ensued, but along the way one thing has remained constant: Owino has been behind bars for more than 11 years.
โI feel like Iโve been triple punishedโpunished excessively,โ Owino, now 38, told me in a recent phone interview from the Etowah County Detention Center in Alabama.
ICE reports theย average detentionย stay is about a month as it carries out roughly 400,000 deportations each yearโmost for unlawful presence in the country and others, like Owino, for criminal behavior. ICE succeeds in deporting four out of five detainees, and most of the remaining immigrants win the right to stay in the United States. But a few hundred are stuck in legal limbo. These detainees are not serving criminal sentences, but for various reasons the government hasnโt been able to deport them.
โWeโve all grown up in a context that we assume we have a right to a lawyer and due process,โ said Michael Tan, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Unionโs Immigrantsโ Rights Project. โThat just isnโt the case in the immigration system.โ
Legal limbo
In a 1982 Supreme Court decision, former Justice William Brennan wrote: โAliens, even aliens whose presence in this country is unlawful, have long been recognized as โpersonsโ guaranteed due process of law by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.โ But a series of court decisions have upheld the legality of detention and the so-called plenary power doctrineโa legal concept giving the legislative and executive branches almost unlimited authority to craft immigration laws.
In 2001, the Supreme Court ruled inย Zadvydas v. Davisย that the government cannot detain non-citizens for more than six months if deportation is unlikely in the foreseeable futureโsuch as in cases of North Korean or Cuban nationals whose countries refuse to take them back. The decision,ย along with two othersย issued the same term, led immigrant advocates to predict the coming end of long-term detention and legal experts to predict the end of the plenary power doctrine.
It hasnโt worked out that way. Subsequent court rulings have interpretedย Zadvydasย narrowly, leaving the government, in some instances, toย detain for yearsย immigrants whose countries donโt openly refuse them. Most countries are unlikely to deny requests because the United States ties foreign aid to cooperation on immigration.
In Owinoโs case, Kenya has refused to take him back as long as his appeal is still in process. Owino, a former Kenyan track athlete, says Kenyan police beat him after he spoke out against government abuses, so heโs fighting his removal to the country based on the United Nations Convention Against Torture. Kenyan police brutality is well-documented, including the recently publicized case of a convert from Islam to Christianity, but immigration courts have so far ruled Owinoโs claim is not credible.
James Fife, Owinoโs lawyer, says his client should have been released while his case worked its way through the legal system, noting his cooperation while in custody, letters of recommendation from a detention center warden and ICE officer, and ready sponsors upon his release. ICE in 2012 issued a temporary stay of removal pending Owinoโs appeal, but immigration judges have repeatedly denied his bond request, ruling him a flight risk and a danger to the community.
โOn what basis is such a stale conviction likelihood of danger?โ said Fife, a public defender who has worked on Owinoโs case since 2006. โNo one would ever be released from prison if all you did is go back and look at what their conviction was. Iโve had people released on much more serious convictionsโon no bond and no supervision.โ
From ICEโs perspective, Owino is responsible for his lengthy detention, because heโs continued to fight his case in court and his criminal past makes him unfit for release. โMr. Owino is a convicted felon,โ ICE spokesman Bryan Cox told me via email. โEach review of Mr. Owinoโs case has resulted in a determination that his significant criminal history makes him subject to mandatory detention under the law.โ
Source-worldmag.com
Kenyan in Detention: How long is Too Long to Detain Immigrants?
Kenyan in Detention: How long is Too Long to Detain Immigrants?
Kenyan in Detention: How long is Too Long to Detain Immigrants?