Pardoning Immigrants

49 Pages Posted: 5 Sep 2017 Last revised: 30 Jan 2020

See all articles by Peter L. Markowitz

Peter L. Markowitz

Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law - Yeshiva University

Lindsay Nash

Yeshiva University - Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

Date Written: August 11, 2017

Abstract

In the waning days of the Obama Administration, with Trump’s promised immigration crackdown looming, over one hundred advocacy organizations joined forces to urge President Obama to permanently protect hundreds of thousands of immigrants from deportation by pardoning their breaches of civil immigration law. That pardon never materialized and, as expected, the Trump enforcement regime is sowing terror and devastation in immigrant communities nationwide. While it seems unfathomable that the current president would use his pardon power to mitigate even the most extreme applications of our nation’s immigration laws, there is unfortunately no indication that the harshest aspects of the immigration laws are likely to be revised by the current political branches. Accordingly, future presidents will likely once again face the questions of how they may use prosecutorial discretion generally, and the pardon power specifically, to address the human toll of such laws. Since the founding, the pardon power has been used primarily to forgive individual criminal convictions. Thus the broad civil immigration pardon, which Obama declined to issue, would have raised novel questions regarding the appropriate boundaries the presidential pardon power. Resolution of those previously unexplored questions is necessary to help future presidents determine whether their pardon power can serve as a safety valve to alleviating the disproportionate penalties that our immigration laws have imposed on longtime members of our communities.

This article explores the novel concept of a civil immigration pardon. Specifically, it closely examines the language and drafting history of the Pardon Clause, exhaustively reviews early and modern pardon practice and jurisprudence, and considers whether a president could, consistent with the Constitution, use that power to protect some of the largest categories of noncitizens currently at risk of deportation. Ultimately, it argues that that the president possesses the constitutional authority to categorically pardon broad classes of immigrants for civil violations of the immigration laws and to thereby provide durable and permanent protections against deportation. As millions of noncitizens and their families face a historically unprecedented wave of deportations and as traditional mechanisms for policymaking continue to fail, the immigration pardon offers an important tool for future presidents to forgive the civil offenses that result in some of the most unforgiving penalties in our nation’s justice system.

Keywords: immigration, pardons

Suggested Citation

Markowitz, Peter L. and Nash, Lindsay, Pardoning Immigrants (August 11, 2017). 93 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 58 (2018) (co-authored), Cardozo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 524, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3028242

Peter L. Markowitz

Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law - Yeshiva University ( email )

55 Fifth Ave.
Room 1111
New York, NY 10003
United States
212-790-0340 (Phone)

Lindsay Nash (Contact Author)

Yeshiva University - Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law ( email )

55 Fifth Ave.
New York, NY 10003
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
202
Abstract Views
1,632
Rank
300,964
PlumX Metrics