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The Case of the Cleveland Doctor

AGBF

Super_Ideal_Rock
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"The New York Times" reported that the current battle over immigration law may center over this Cleveland doctor. She was illegally detained and deported despite having a valid visa to live and work in the United States and being engaged to another US physician. She had a job and a home in the United States.

"Dr. Abushamma’s case was highlighted at a hearing in Federal District Court in Brooklyn on Thursday, where Judge Carol B. Amon extended until Feb. 21 the initial ruling — formally known as a stay of removal — issued last week by her colleague, Judge Ann M. Donnelly.

Judge Amon will be presiding over the case and deciding on the legal issues underlying the executive order, while at the same time overseeing nine cases in which plaintiffs say they were improperly deported.

The Thursday hearing before Judge Amon was largely procedural and was held to set out the schedule for arguments and motions in coming weeks. But in a separate action the day before, Judge Amon ordered the government to explain in writing by mid-February why she should not allow Dr. Abushamma to return to the United States, where the doctor is engaged to be married to a fellow physician.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs described Dr. Abushamma’s detention and deportation during Thursday’s hearing.

Four days before Mr. Trump signed the executive order, Dr. Abushamma had flown to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia to spend time with her family. Her apartment, her car and all of her belongings — save the few that she had packed for her vacation — were still in Cleveland. But when she landed at Kennedy Airport on Jan. 28, she was detained by customs agents and not allowed to continue on to Cleveland, according to the papers filed on Thursday.

Dr. Abushamma, the papers said, was held for more than six hours at the airport, as arguments were being held in Judge Donnelly’s courtroom. And although her immigration lawyer tried to explain to customs agents that the judge was about to rule, the lawyer was ignored, the papers said. She was escorted onto a plane headed back to Saudi Arabia by two customs officials.
New York Today

'One stood in front of her and the other stood behind her,' according to the papers. 'Dr. Abushamma felt like they were trying to make sure that she did not escape, as though she was a criminal in custody.'

In court, lawyers for the immigrants said it remained unclear if people were removed from the country in violation of Judge Donnelly’s ruling, as Dr. Abushamma contends she was, and how many of them there might be. Though lawyers say they have repeatedly asked the government for a detailed list of those who were both detained and deported since the ruling went into effect, federal officials have not yet provided one. The government has said that no immigrants are currently in custody, but lawyers say that could be because some of them have already been improperly sent back to their homelands.

'It is unlikely we have found the entire universe of people who have been removed,' said Lee Gelernt, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, who argued for the immigrants at the hearing. Mr. Gelernt said that he would give the government another chance to furnish him with a list of detainees and those who were deported, but he added that if federal officials did not provide the list within 'a short time' — perhaps as early as Friday — he would consider filing a contempt of court complaint against the administration."

Link...https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/03/nyregion/trump-ban-suha-amin-abdullah-abushamma.html?ribbon-ad-idx=3&rref=politics&modu

AGBF :read:
 
It's all so very sad. A physician denied entry back to her home and her boyfriend. We have sunk so low Deb that I'm not sure what will happen. Very very volatile times to be an American. I'm going to Europe in less then 4 months, I'm going to say I'm Canadian.
 
I read about this and it broke my heart. I am a physician. I remember residency. This would have broken me if it happened to me during residency.

The US medical system is propped up on the backs of immigrant physicians. There is simply no way to attract physicians to the rural areas - not even with HUGE salaries - without the use of the H1b Visa and the promise of a green card in the future.
 
wildcat03|1486222362|4124215 said:
I read about this and it broke my heart. I am a physician. I remember residency. This would have broken me if it happened to me during residency.

The US medical system is propped up on the backs of immigrant physicians. There is simply no way to attract physicians to the rural areas - not even with HUGE salaries - without the use of the H1b Visa and the promise of a green card in the future.

I totally agree. My own doctor is an immigrant and she is such an asset to the U.S. To create our own brain drain? It's insane. Years ago I worked with post-doc researchers and without immigrants we would lose out on so much medical research and progress.
 
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