Trump wants to use a 226-year-old law to deport millions of undocumented migrants. Can he do it? - Action News
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Trump wants to use a 226-year-old law to deport millions of undocumented migrants. Can he do it?

Donald Trump's pathway to deporting millions of undocumented migrants may hinge on a 226-year old-law last usedto target and detain non-citizens of Japanese, German and Italiandescent during the Second World War.

U.S. president-elect has vowed 'largest deportation program in American history'

Supporters hold signs before Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally Wednesday, July 24, 2024, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Supporters hold up signs ahead of a rally for Donald Trump in Charlotte, N.C., on on July 24. Trump's vow to deport millions of illegal immigrants may hinge on a 226-year-old law that was last invoked during the Second World War. (Alex Brandon/The Associated Press)

Donald Trump's pathway to deporting millions of undocumented migrants may hinge on a 226-year-old law that was last usedto detain non-citizens of Japanese, German and Italiandescent during the Second World War.

The 1798 Alien Enemies Act is a potential tool the U.S. president-elect has said he will use to try to make good on one of his key campaign pledges that otherwise could be stalled significantly by thelegal machinations of the deportation process.

"If Trump were to try to use the normal procedures, it would [be to] round up a lot of people and put them into immigration court proceedings," saidStephen Yale-Loehr, a professor of immigration law at Cornell University.

"But it would be a long time before they could actually be deported."

According to the Centerfor Migration Studies, there were around 11.7 millionundocumentedmigrants in the U.S. as of July 2023.

Trump has said that on day one of his presidency, he will "launch the largest deportation program in American history."To that end, he recentlyannounced thatTom Homan, who was acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement during Trump's first administration, wouldbe his border czar.

Homan has previously said thathe would be willing to "run the biggest deportation operation this country's ever seen."

Slow, expensive procedure

But becausedue process under the U.S. Constitution applies to everyone, not just citizens, those who have been accused of being undocumented migrants must go through immigration court proceedings, Yale-Loehr says.

During those proceedings, an immigrationjudge decides whether those individuals are deportable or have some relief from deportation, such as asylum, hesays.

Currently, however, there is a backlog of 3.7 million cases in the immigration courts, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University, which compiles statistics on immigration. Meanwhile, the U.S. Justice Departmentestimates there are only approximately700 immigration judges in the country's 71 immigration courts.

"Many cases are being scheduled for fouror fiveyears from now," Yale-Loehr said.

WATCH |Trump tapsloyalists, hardliners for cabinet:

Trump unveils loyalists, immigration hardliners as cabinet picks

4 days ago
Duration 2:02
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump unveiled some cabinet picks over the weekend, including vocal immigration hardliners Stephen Miller and Tom Homan who will be tasked with Trump's promise to carry out the largest deportation in American history.

That means if Trump follows current deportation procedures, he will need money to hire more immigration agents, build more detention centresand hire more immigration judges, he says.

It could be an extremely costly endeavour. The American Immigration Councilestimatesthat a one-time mass deportation operation, which would include expenses forarrest, detention, legal processingand removal would cost more than $300 billion US.

A legal shortcut

That may be why Trump, in order to carry out mass deportations, may seek to circumvent the system by invokingtheAlien Enemies Act,which was enacted when the U.S. and France were on the verge of war in the late 1700s.

Amid concernabout potential French supporters livingin the U.S.at that time,the law sought totoprevent foreign espionage and sabotage in wartime. It permits the president to target those individuals without a hearing, based only on their country of birth or citizenship, says Katherine Yon Ebright,counsel for the Brennan Center's Liberty and National Security Program.

The president may invoke the act in times of "declared war" or when a foreign government threatens or undertakes an "invasion" or "predatory incursion" against U.S. territory, Ebright recently wrote in a report for the Brennan Center, a nonpartisan law and justice institute.

Another requirement is that the invasion or incursion must be perpetrated by a foreign nation or government, Ebrightnoted.

The act has been used three times the War of 1812, the First World War and lastly during the Second World War,when President Franklin D Roosevelt used it to deemJapanese, Germanand Italian non-citizens as"alien enemies" and arrest them.

A man in a suit gestures while speaking at a lectern. Other men, and some American flags, are visible in the blurry background.
Trump has named Tom Homan seen here speaking at a campaign event in Nashua, N.H., on Jan. 23 as the border czar for his new administration. (Matt Rourke/The Associated Press)

Ebrightsays Trump and others have for years been trying to characterize unlawful migration and cartel activity at the southern border as an "invasion."

"They're saying, 'Well, because there's an invasion at the southern border, we can invoke the Alien Enemies Act against the perpetrators of that invasion. Then we can unlock that massive power to do summary detentions and deportations.'" Ebrighttold CBC News.

But she says the BrennanCenterand other organizations are prepared to challenge Trump in court if he invokes the act, and would argue that it's being improperly invoked.

"There, in fact, is no invasion within the meaning of the law," she said.

"There is no foreign nation or government that is perpetrating this supposed invasion," she said, adding thatgangs, cartelsor undocumented migrants shouldn't be considered foreignnations or governments.

Yale-Loehr echoesthat, currently, the U.S. has not made anydeclaration of war against immigrants and that Trump would have to, by analogy, say thattrying to deport immigrants is akin to war.

Hiroshi Motomura, the facultyco-director of the Center for ImmigrationLawat UCLA, says the text of the Aliens Enemy Act doesn't seem to apply to this situation.

Motomura says the so-called invasion wouldn't be referring to people who are just showing up in caravans at the border, but to people who have been in the U.S. for a long time.

"Ifthere was an invasion, and i don't think there was, it was 10 years ago.Or something like that," he said.

However, Ebright did say that courts could decide these are political questions that are outside the scope of what the courts can resolve, meaning Trump's argument could prevail.

But he would still face the same logistical challenges,Yale-Loehr said.

"You're still going to have to have some place to detain all these people and you're going to have to have planes to fly them out. So, again, you could eventually deport a lot of people this way, but it's not going to all happen on day one of the presidency."

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers escort a man detained at an immigration and customs processing facility, Wednesday, March 15, 2023, in San Diego. Some asylum-seekers who crossed the border from Mexico are waiting 10 years just for a court date. The Border Patrol released people with notices to appear at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office. The move saved the Border Patrol untold hours processing court papers, but it left the job to an agency that had no extra staff for the increased workload. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers escort a man detained at a facility in San Diego, on March 15, 2023. (Gregory Bull/The Associated Press)

With files from The Associated Press