O'ROURKE v. Warden, Metropolitan Correction Center

539 F. Supp. 1131, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12444
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 24, 1982
Docket81 Civ. 4369 (MEL)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 539 F. Supp. 1131 (O'ROURKE v. Warden, Metropolitan Correction Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'ROURKE v. Warden, Metropolitan Correction Center, 539 F. Supp. 1131, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12444 (S.D.N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

LASKER, District Judge.

Michael O’Rourke petitions for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that he is being unlawfully held without bail pending resolution of his deportation proceedings.

I.

O’Rourke was arrested by agents of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) early in November, 1979, on charges of being a deportable alien because of illegal entry under 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(2). The District Director of the INS, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a), decided that O’Rourke should be held in custody pending final determination of deportability. O’Rourke then applied to Immigration Judge Nathan W. Gordon for bail and his application was denied on November 7, 1979, on the representations of the INS that O’Rourke is a member of the Irish Republican Army (“I.R.A.”), that he is a terrorist, and that he had escaped from an Irish prison. (Administrative Record at 3). O’Rourke then appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), which remanded the case because there had been no substantiation of the INS assertions about O’Rourke. At the hearing on remand, the INS presented evidence to show that O’Rourke had been convicted in Ireland of possessing explosives and had been sentenced to terms of imprisonment of two years and six years, to run concurrently; that while serving that sentence, O’Rourke and two fellow I. R. A. members escaped from prison by exploding a bomb in a court holding pen in which they were waiting to testify at a trial; and that he faces a possible sentence of life imprisonment from charges arising out of the escape. Asserting his rights under the Fifth Amendment, O’Rourke refused to answer any qu.stions at the hearing. O’Rourke’s application for bail was again denied on the basis that he presented a risk of flight. On appeal, the BIA affirmed the decision denying O’Rourke bail.

Soon afterward, on July 17, 1980, it was determined in the separate deportation proceedings that O’Rourke was deportable on the INS’ amended charge that he had overstayed his visa. O’Rourke then filed for an “adjustment of status” under 8 U.S.C. § 1255 on the basis of his common-law marriage to an American citizen. In support of his application, O’Rourke argued that he had committed no crimes in the United States and that his I. R. A. activities did not render him excludable because those activities constituted political, rather than common, crimes.

Subsequently, in July, 1980, O’Rourke moved the BIA for reconsideration of its earlier denial of bail. On this occasion, he waived his Fifth Amendment privilege and submitted his own extensive affidavit in which he described how he came to be involved with the I. R. A., his strong conviction that the British presence in Ireland was wrong and oppressive, and the activities leading up to his convictions in Ireland.

According to O’Rourke, he joined the I. R. A. in the summer of 1971, the culmination of a gradually increasing dedication to the cause of the I. R. A. He describes the experience of I. R. A. membership as being “no different than any other Army training.” (Administrative Record at 270). He was trained in weapons and explosives use, drilling, and other aspects of soldiering. At the conclusion of his training, he became a regular I. R. A. member and was assigned as an Engineering Officer to work at Army Headquarters, where he was involved in the research, development and manufacture of weapons, explosives, rockets, and mortars for use by I. R. A. troops until his arrest in August, 1975. O’Rourke states that he learned immediately after his arrest that his father had also been arrested and that he was questioned and asked to give a statement, which he refused until the authorities told him that since explosives were found at his home, on his father’s property, his father would be charged and sentenced. He claims that he was also told that because of his age, his father would die in prison and that he was told that if he *1133 signed a confession, his father would be freed, and if he did not his father would be charged. He states that his requests for the assistance of counsel were denied and that he eventually signed a confession, and his father was released.

Upon sentence, O’Rourke was imprisoned in the Port Laoise Jail which he describes as a special place of detention for those convicted of I. R. A. activities. As O’Rourke describes the division of authority in the jail, the I. R. A. prisoners were specially treated as political prisoners or prisoners of war rather than as criminals. They were not required to work, were permitted to wear their own clothes, enjoyed free association within the prison and elected their own officers to whom the governmental authorities directed communications; they were allowed unlimited mail and visits, food parcels, radios and other goods from the outside, and simply upon the word of another I. R. A. prisoner assuring return, received unescorted parole to visit death beds or funerals of immediate relatives. The prisoners’ daily regime consisted of military drills, Gaelic language courses, guerilla warfare classes, and political discussion sessions, all organized and supervised according to the I. R. A. hierarchy. The prison staff, according to O’Rourke, did not discipline any I. R. A. member: discipline was carried out within the I. R. A. organization itself, and the only function of the prison staff was to prevent escape.

In June of 1976, O’Rourke asserts, he was directed by senior I. R. A. officers to participate in an escape, to be made from a courthouse holding cell. In preparation for the escape, O’Rourke made a small diversionary bomb to distract attention from the larger bombing of the cell’s wall through which the escape would occur. He states that he threw the small bomb out of the cell and it landed near a guard who did not see it, and that he yelled to the guard to move away from the bomb, who moved in time to escape injury. Subsequently, the guards fled and O’Rourke and his comrades escaped after opening the cell door with another bomb. According to O’Rourke, he returned to service with the I. R. A. after his escape, until he learned from I. R. A. intelligence sources that the government was planning to kill him because they believed that he was involved in the death of a British ambassador.

At that point, O’Rourke states, he was instructed to obtain a passport and visa under a ficticious name and to go to the United States. He did so. Once in the United States, he settled in Philadelphia where he made contacts in the Irish community and secured employment doing contracting work. Soon thereafter, he met Margaret Lieb and they fell in love. They wished to get married, but O’Rourke did not want to marry under a ficticious name, so they performed a ceremony themselves in the hope and belief that their action constituted a legal marriage under Pennsylvania common law.

In October, 1979, O’Rourke asserts, he began to hear from friends that the FBI was looking for him and had learned his assumed name and true identity. He decided not to run, but to wait and he was arrested on October 30, 1979.

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Bluebook (online)
539 F. Supp. 1131, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orourke-v-warden-metropolitan-correction-center-nysd-1982.