Haitian Refugee Center v. Civiletti

503 F. Supp. 442, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9659
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 2, 1980
Docket79-2086-Civ-JLK
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 503 F. Supp. 442 (Haitian Refugee Center v. Civiletti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haitian Refugee Center v. Civiletti, 503 F. Supp. 442, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9659 (S.D. Fla. 1980).

Opinion

JAMES LAWRENCE KING, District Judge.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. Introduction 450

A. Limits of Immigration Law 452

B. Asylum Rights: Substantive 453

C. Asylum Rights: Procedural 454

II. Threshold Legal Issues 456

A. Jurisdiction 457

B. Justiciability 461

1. Mootness 462
2. Timing of Judicial Review 467
3. Political Question 470
4. Standing 473

III. Conditions in Haiti 474

A. Haitian Refugees: Treatment on Return 476

1. A Pattern of Persecution 476
2. The State Department Report 482

a. Composition of the Study Team 486

b. The Sample 487

c. Assurances to Returnees 488

d. The Interviews 491

e. Conclusion 492

B. Haitian Prisons: Persecution Exemplified 493

C. Haitian Power: The Rule of the Duvalier Security Forces 497

D. Haitian Legal Systems: The Absence of a Rule of Law 500

E. Haitian Politics: Suppression of the Opposition 503

F. Haitian Society: Suppression of Free Voices 506

6. Haitian Economics: The Economics of Repression 507
H. Conclusion 510

IV. INS Treatment of Haitian Asylum Claims 510

A. The Has+ian Program: Intentional Discrimination 511

1. The Haitian Problem 511
2. The Goals of the Haitian Program 512

*450 IV. INS Treatment of Haitian Asylums Claims — Continued

A. The Haitian Program: Intentional Discrimination — Continued page
3. Implementation at the District Level 516
4. Conclusion: Discrimination 518

B. The Haitian Program: Systematic Due Process Violations 519

1. Immigration Judge Action 519

a. Failure to Suspend Deportation Proceedings 520

b. Derogation of the Right to Remain Silent 521

c. Time Limits 521

d. Conclusion 523

2. Cumulative Effect of Accelerated Process 523

a. Mass Scheduling 523

b. Cumulative Effect 525

c. Conclusion 526

3. Conduct of Asylum Interviews 526
4. Asylum Decision-Making 527
5. Other Asylum Procedures 529

a. Public Access to Prior Decisions and Nonrecorded

Matter 529

b. Use of Form Letter Denials 530

c. Accuracy of Translation 530

d. Failure to Advise Haitians of Rights Prior to Taking

Statements 530

6. State Department Participation in Asylum Decisions 531
7. Deprivation of the Haitian Refugee Center’s Right to Free

Speech 531

C. Conclusion 532

V. Relief 532

FINAL ORDER GRANTING RELIEF

This case involves thousands of black Haitian nationals, the brutality of their government, and the prejudice of ours. Perhaps thirty thousand Haitians have flocked to the shores of South Florida over the past twenty years, fleeing the most repressive government in the Americas. From among that group come the plaintiffs: five thousand persons who have sought political asylum in the United States. They claim that if they are returned to Haiti they will face persecution, imprisonment and death. All of their asylum claims were denied by the Immigration and Naturalization Service.

For the most part, the plaintiffs reached the United States in old, small, leaky wooden sailboats. The boats are dangerously overcrowded, but these Haitians continue to brave the elements across eight hundred miles of open sea. The vast number spent weeks adrift without food or water. Many died in the attempt:

When I heard the news, I went to Freeport. When I entered the morgue, I saw my wife lying there with the four children. I had nothing in my hand. It was only myself and God there. Constant Louis, Tr. at 1195-96.

This case has forced the court to confront a profound set of questions: Why have so many taken such great risks? What do they flee? Why do they fear to return?

In searching for the answer to these and other questions, the court has seen a stark picture of how these plaintiff-immigrants will be treated if they return to Haiti. And it has seen an equally stark, and even more troubling, picture of the treatment of Haitians by the Immigration and Naturalization Service.

I. INTRODUCTION

The plaintiffs seek political asylum in this country. Hence, this case calls into question many of the intricacies of asylum pro *451 cedures before the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). The court must examine the minutiae of those procedures to determine if the plaintiffs were accorded fundamentally fair due process. One central issue, however, overshadows this entire case: unlawful discrimination. The plaintiffs charge that they faced a transparently discriminatory program designed to deport Haitian nationals and no one else. The uncontroverted evidence proves their claim.

The Haitians allege that the actions of INS constitute impermissible discrimination on the basis of national origin. They have proven their claim. This court cannot close its eyes, however, to a possible underlying reason why these plaintiffs have been subjected to intentional “national origin” discrimination. The plaintiffs are part of the first substantial flight of black refugees from a repressive regime to this country. All of the plaintiffs are black. In contrast, for example, only a relatively small percent of the Cuban refugees who have fled to this country are black. Prior to the most recent Cuban exodus, all of the Cubans who sought political asylum in individual 8 C.F.R. Sec. 108 hearings were granted asylum routinely. 1

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