{"id":22749,"date":"2020-04-03T02:37:55","date_gmt":"2020-04-03T06:37:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/?p=22749"},"modified":"2020-04-03T02:37:58","modified_gmt":"2020-04-03T06:37:58","slug":"covid-19-immigration-detainees-immigrationreform-com","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2020\/04\/03\/covid-19-immigration-detainees-immigrationreform-com\/","title":{"rendered":"Alien Advocates Flipping the Script on Immigration Detainees and COVID-19"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Over the last few weeks, the mainstream media<\/a> has been filled<\/a> with calls to release detainees<\/a> being held by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, in order to halt the spread of the Novel Coronavirus<\/a>. While everyone would like to see a rapid end to the current public health emergency, these pleas are at best misguided. At worst they represent the cynical exploitation of a crisis<\/a> to advance the agenda of the open borders lobby.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In the United States, detention is a tool for ensuring compliance with the rule of law<\/a>. People who violate criminal statutes face an extended loss of their liberty in the form of a punitive prison sentence. Individuals who violate civil laws may be detained until they either comply, or are forced to comply, with a court order.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

While an individual subject to\ndetention or imprisonment retains certain fundamental rights, being freed\nwhenever there is a threat of communicable disease isn\u2019t one of them. The fact\nthat lawbreakers have been incarcerated means that they have violated the law\nin such a manner that society\u2019s collective safety becomes more important than\ntheir individual liberty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The cries to release immigration\ndetainees, lest they contract an illness in the regimented confines of a\ncorrectional institution, flip the script. They imply that society\u2019s collective\ninterest in being protected from law-breakers is less important than the\nindividual rights of the scofflaws. This is simply not the case.  While we have an obligation to protect\nimmigration detainees from COVID-19, to the greatest extent possible, we have\nno obligation to ignore their offenses and set them at liberty because they might<\/em> become infected.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

To do so would be ludicrous. As\nit is, vast numbers of immigration lawbreakers who are released on their own\nrecognizance disappear into the interior of the United States and fail to\nappear for any further immigration proceedings. Any aliens released from\nimmigration detention in the amidst the chaos of the current public health\ncrisis will, in effect, be granted de\nfacto<\/em> amnesty from our immigration laws, as they will evaporate into the\nvast alien underground, never to be heard from again. This is especially true\nof those who are detained subject to a final order of removal, pending actual\ndeportation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In addition to attempting to make victims out of perpetrators, the calls to furlough detained foreigners are hypocritical. Even as alien advocates are clamoring for the release of foreign detainees, they are simultaneously claiming that migrants at liberty in the United States are among those most vulnerable<\/a> to COVID-19 infection. This, the open borders agitators claim, is because many poorer immigrants lack health insurance and\/or access to healthcare. And, the argument goes, due to their poverty, those same migrants must continue to work in jobs that will potentially lead to coronavirus exposure. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

However, if this were true,\nwouldn\u2019t detained aliens be better off than their free compatriots? While those\nsubject to detention must contend with close conditions, they have access to\n24\/7 healthcare, at no charge. And they are living in a regimented environment\nwhere preventative measures, including isolation, can be implemented rapidly\nand efficiently by detention center authorities. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Finally, one key factor that is being ignored by those calling for the release of immigration lawbreakers is the fact that detained aliens\u2019 loss of liberty is triggered by their own behavior. They chose to engage in activity that violated the rule of law. Inherent in that choice is an element of risk \u2013 the risk of incarceration, the risk of deportation, and the dangers that accompany both temporary detention and removal from the U.S. When the open borders contingent asks law-abiding Americans, who also live in fear of COVID-19 infection, to insulate foreign law-breakers from both the threat of disease<\/a> and the consequences of their disrespect for our immigration laws, it has gone a bridge too far.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Over the last few weeks, the mainstream media has been filled with calls to release detainees being held by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, in order to halt the spread of the Novel Coronavirus. While everyone would like to see a rapid end to the current public health emergency, these pleas are at best misguided.<\/p>\n

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