02/08/10
From Judicial Watch
Tattoos Save Convict From Deportation
A convicted felon cannot be deported because tattooed criminals like him are
often harassed by gangs and police in his native El Salvador, according to a
federal appellate court that overruled both an immigration judge and the Justice
Department’s Board of Immigration Appeals.
The preposterous ruling was issued a few days ago by the abhorrently liberal and
frequently overturned 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. The case involves a violent
multiple offender from El Salvador (Gregory Aguilar-Ramos) who has been
convicted in the United States of serious crimes, including robbery and theft
with priors.
As a child the felon became a U.S. resident but, under federal law, his felony
convictions require he be deported. In 2005 the Department of Homeland Security
began the process, citing his conviction of an aggravated felony and two violent
crimes of moral turpitude. A year later Aguilar-Ramos sought asylum, claiming
that he feared gangs and police in El Salvador would target him because of his
“multiple tattoos” and “status as a deportee from the United States.”
An immigration judge denied the petition, citing the criminal’s failure to prove
that he faced torture in his native country. The Board of Immigration Appeals,
the nation’s highest administrative body for interpreting and applying
immigration laws, agreed with the decision and Aguilar-Ramos appealed to the San
Francisco-based 9th Circuit. The case was argued in the southern California city
of Pasadena a few months ago.
The sympathetic three-judge panel based its decision largely on the testimony of
an “expert” who monitors gangs and police in El Salvador. He testified that
deportees like Aguilar face years in jail, death or serious injury in prison as
well as harassment by police or military patrols. In some cases, they face
“death squads” that operate with the awareness of the government,” according to
the 10-page ruling.
Before deporting Aguilar to El Salvador immigration officials must seriously
consider that police and gangs in the tiny Central American nation harass,
persecute and kill tattooed criminal deportees like him, the decision says.
These sorts of outrageous rulings are par for the course for the western appeals
court, the largest of the nation’s 13 appellate courts. The 9th Circuit is best
known for getting overturned by the Supreme Court more than any other. This term
alone, the High Court reversed 94% of its rulings in cases involving issues such
as civil rights, prisoners’ rights and environmental protection.
Last year the 9th Circuit Court’s chief justice, Alex Kozinski, was embroiled in
an embarrassing scandal for operating a publicly accessible website containing
sexually explicit and offensive images. The judge’s salacious website became an
issue in the obscenity trial of a Hollywood adult filmmaker that he presided
over.
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I seem to recall that El Salvador is the source of the blood-thirsty MS-13 gang that is recognized by having most of their bodies covered by grotesque, obscene tattoos. Perhaps the problem is that this poor misunderstood victim of circumstances has the "wrong" tattoos on his body. Surely we could help him out by removing them before his trip home. An electric sander or rasp should be fast and effective.
The 9th Circuit Court should accompany him on his return to El Salvador to monitor his acceptance back into society there and to insure that he is not discriminated against or victimized in any way. The entire court staff, judges, legal staff, assistants, clerks, etc., should take advantage of the opportunity as a learning experience; and should extend their stay in El Salvador for at least 12 months to obtain a thorough understanding of the plight of the MS-13s.


MS-13 Gangsters from El Salvador 9th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals