Democrats call for closure of Delaney Hall ICE detention center
As House Homeland Security Committee Democrats stage an unsanctioned “shadow hearing” in Newark, New Jersey, to scrutinize an ICE detention center following recent unrest, a separate immigration case is drawing fresh attention to the government’s detention powers and the limits of free speech enforcement.
On Thursday, a federal judge ordered the release of Salah Sarsour, the Palestinian president of Wisconsin’s largest mosque, from immigration custody. The court found that Sarsour had presented a “substantial” claim that he was detained in retaliation for speech supporting Palestinian rights.
Sarsour, a legal permanent resident of the United States, was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on March 30. Federal officials have argued that he poses a foreign policy threat, while his attorneys say the real reason for his detention was his criticism of Israel.
In his ruling, U.S. District Judge James Patrick Hanlon, a nominee of President Donald Trump, said lawyers for ICE and the Department of Homeland Security failed to provide sufficient evidence to rebut Sarsour’s retaliation claim. Hanlon also questioned why the government now considers Sarsour a threat after he has lived legally in the United States for more than 30 years.
The decision comes as immigration enforcement is already under heightened political scrutiny. In Newark, Democrats on the House Homeland Security Committee, unable to convene an official hearing, are holding their own field session led by Congressman Bennie Thompson to examine conditions at an ICE detention facility. Congressional correspondent Bill Melugin reported on the event, while former Acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf noted that Delaney Hall had operated during the Obama administration without drawing the same level of criticism from Democrats.
Shortly after his release from a county jail in Indiana, where he had been held since his arrest, Sarsour was seen smiling in a photo distributed by the Associated Press through Yaseen Najeeb.
