Writy.
  • Home
  • Mass Tort
  • Personal Injury
  • Civil Rights
  • Worker’s Compensation
  • Premises Liability
  • Police Misconduct
No Result
View All Result
Writy.
  • Home
  • Mass Tort
  • Personal Injury
  • Civil Rights
  • Worker’s Compensation
  • Premises Liability
  • Police Misconduct
No Result
View All Result
Writy.
No Result
View All Result
mmigration_law_book_and_gavel

Use of term ‘noncitizen’ is ‘unfortunate trend in caselaw,’ 9th Circuit judge says

Injury Insiders by Injury Insiders
September 13, 2022
in Premises Liability
0

[ad_1]

  1. Home
  2. Daily News
  3. Use of term ‘noncitizen’ is ‘unfortunate…

Immigration Law

Use of term ‘noncitizen’ is ‘unfortunate trend in caselaw,’ 9th Circuit judge says

By Debra Cassens Weiss

September 13, 2022, 8:48 am CDT

mmigration_law_book_and_gavel

Image from Shutterstock.

A federal appeals judge used a concurrence to criticize his colleagues for using the word “noncitizen” instead of the statutory term “alien” in an immigration opinion last week.

Judge Carlos T. Bea of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at San Francisco said the substitution of “noncitizen” for “alien” is an “unfortunate trend in caselaw.”

Law.com has coverage.

“The nonstatutory word ‘noncitizen’ has attained a certain prominence throughout the federal judiciary,” Bea wrote in his Sept. 8 concurrence. “Of course, the term is textually inaccurate as applied to the petitioner in this case, who is a citizen of Mexico. Indeed, most of the petitioners appearing before this circuit are citizens of one country or another.”

Bea said federal immigration statutes concern themselves with “aliens.”

“I respectfully suggest my colleagues hew closely to the laws as they are written, both in form and in substance,” he wrote.

In her principal opinion, Chief Judge Mary H. Murguia wrote in a footnote that she described habeas petitioner Lexis Hernandez Avilez as a noncitizen for two reasons.

First, use of the term “has become a common practice” of the U.S. Supreme Court and the Department of Justice’s Board of Immigration Appeals. The footnote cited opinions by Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Sonia Sotomayor and Brett Kavanaugh.

Second, careful writers avoid terms that reasonable readers might find offensive and distracting. The word “alien” can suggest “strange,” “different,” “repugnant,” “hostile” and “opposed,” the footnote said. The word “noncitizen,” which is synonymous with “alien,” “avoids such connotations.”

Bea, however, said the word “alien” is “not a pejorative nor an insult.” He didn’t consider the word insulting when he was in deportation proceedings, Bea said.

Bea was born in Spain and came to the United States as a child, he said in an oral history published by the Ninth Judicial Circuit Historical Society. He later became a legal permanent resident but lost his residency status after living in Madrid.

He received a student visa, however, to continue his studies at Stanford University. He went through deportation proceedings in hopes of getting review of his loss of residency status.

He won before the Board of Immigration Appeals.



[ad_2]

You might also like

Announcement of orders and opinions for Monday, May 16

Announcement of opinions for Wednesday, April 17

April 17, 2024
501940

Bet Gordon Ramsey Feels Like An Idiot Sandwich For Letting This Happen To His Pub

April 16, 2024
Injury Insiders

Injury Insiders

Next Post
She Hulk Disney image

Attorney at Law' and controlling your rage in the courtroom

© 2022 injuryinsiders.com - All rights reserved by Injury Insiders.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Mass Tort
  • Personal Injury
  • Civil Rights
  • Worker’s Compensation
  • Premises Liability
  • Police Misconduct

© 2022 injuryinsiders.com - All rights reserved by Injury Insiders.