Anwen Hughes
11:26 AM (10 minutes ago)
Below is a quick summary of how these exemptions work and what we think they mean.
Dear colleagues:
On Wednesday the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Secretary of State jointly issued two new discretionary exemptions from the terrorism-related inadmissibility grounds (“TRIG” is DHS’s abbreviation for these) of the Immigration & Nationality Act. The first of these covers what the exemption announcement terms "insignificant material support" to a group deemed to be a Tier III (undesignated) "terrorist organization" under the INA, or to a member of such a group, or to a person who the actor knows has engaged, or has planned to engage, in the use of armed force in an individual capacity (not as a member of any group). The second applies to certain types of incidental contacts with that same range of actors--Tier III groups, members of Tier III groups, or an individual who has engaged in the use of armed force, or plans to, without being a member of any group, and not acting on behalf of any listed or designated terrorist organization.
Both of these exemption announcements, which have been in the works for a very long time, include the welcome recognition that the INA’s TRIG grounds “bar certain aliens who do not pose a national security or public safety risk from admission to the United States and from obtaining immigration benefits or other status.” These two exemptions are intended to cure some of the most glaring examples of this over-breadth. Because DHS and its sister agencies have chosen to interpret the relevant provisions of the statute, and particularly the term “material support,” in an extremely expansive way, the cases covered by these exemptions, many of which are frankly silly—silly not in their impact on the applicants, which has in many cases been devastating, but in the notion that these kinds of factual scenarios should make anyone subject to the terrorism-related inadmissibility grounds of the INA—actually make up a significant proportion of the TRIG-related caseload. We had hoped that the Administration would resolve part of this problem by adopting a more natural reading of the term “material support,” one that would not consider insignificant assistance to be “material,” and would not consider, for example, routine commercial transactions with members of armed groups to fall within the scope of the bar. The Administration instead has chosen to try to address those problems by means of these discretionary exemptions. Also included in these exemptions are some other scenarios equally unfair but less amenable to resolution through interpretation of the statute alone.
From a practical perspective, for anyone whose case is, or will be, adjudicated by DHS or State (affirmative applicants for asylum and other immigration benefits whose cases are pending with USCIS, refugees seeking resettlement from overseas, and applicants for immigrant visas from abroad), these exemptions once implemented should bring fairly prompt relief. For applicants in removal proceedings, the situation remains very different, and the failure to resolve some of this through a better reading of the statute is particularly frustrating: applicants in removal proceedings who are being told they are barred from asylum because they gave a plate of food to a member of a Tier III group, for sample, or because they ran a restaurant where a member of a Tier III group bought lunch, are still going to have to wait until they have been ordered removed and that removal order is administratively final, before they can be considered for either of these exemptions—and then, they will only be considered assuming the order of removal finds them to be eligible for the benefit they are seeking “but for” this inadmissibility ground (and they have passed all relevant security and background checks, they pose no danger to the safety and security of the United States, they have not provided support to any terrorist activities that they knew or reasonably should have known targeted noncombatant persons, U.S. citizens, or U.S. interests—all of which are conditions always applicable to these exemptions generally—in addition to additional requirements specific to each exemption and discussed below). For those of us doing removal defense, and for our clients in removal proceedings, this is an incredibly draining process, morally, financially, and in every other respect, and these exemptions, while they should ultimately provide relief to many of those applicants, will do so in a much slower, more uncertain, and less efficient way.
Also—and this is a very significant limitation to both of these exemptions—neither the insignificant assistance exemption nor the incidental contacts exemption covers anyone who gave such insignificant assistance or had such incidental contacts with any group that was (at the time of the donation/contact) a Tier I or Tier II group (=a designated foreign terrorist organization or a listed terrorist organization).
Implementation guidance on these exemptions is believed to be final or close to final, but has not yet been published and it is not clear that DHS intends to publish it. What follows is a very quick overview of our current understanding of what these exemptions do, whom they cover, and whom they do not. It appears that DHS may be referring to these exemptions by the acronyms CLE I and CLE II; we am not sure what these abbreviations refer to (“categorical limited exemption” would be our best guess). As of today, these new exemptions have not yet been posted to USCIS’s TRIG exemption website (
http://www.uscis.gov/laws/terrorism...sm-related-inadmissibility-grounds-exemptions ), so in the interests of clarity we will refer to them as the “insignificant assistance exemption” and the “incidental contacts exemption.
1) Insignificant assistance exemption:
This exemption applies to persons who have not provided more than “an insignificant amount of material support” to (1) a Tier III group, (2) a member of a Tier III group, or (3) an individual whom the donor knew, or reasonably should have known, had committed or planned to commit a “terrorist activity” as defined by the INA (which, according to the government, includes any unlawful use of armed force as a non-state actor). This exemption will only apply if the person did not provide this “material support” with any intent of furthering the terrorist or violent activities of the individual or the group to whom the donation was made, did not provide “material support” that the donor knew or reasonably should have known could directly be used to engage in terrorist or violent activity, and has not provided “material support” to any individual whom the donor knew or reasonably should have known had committed or planned to commit a terrorist activity on behalf of a Tier I or Tier II group, and has not provided “material support” that the donor knew or reasonably should have known involved providing weapons, ammunition, explosives, or components thereof, or the transportation or concealment of such items. The applicant must also meet the additional requirements common to both exemptions (and indeed to all those that have gone before them), which are listed below.
Hypothetical example: Zeina lived in a village in Darfur in a region that came under heavy attack from a mix of Sudanese government and government-sponsored forces. Several of Zeina’s relatives had been killed in an attack on a neighboring village, including Zeina’s husband who was visiting family in that village on the day of the attack. After this attack, members of the SLA, a rebel group, came through Zeina’s village. They said they were defending her people against these government-sponsored attacks. Zeina served them food, and gave one of them a package of her late husband’s clothing. A few days later, government forces attacked Zeina’s village, killed many of the villagers, raped Zeina, and burned the village. Zeina fled to neighboring Chad, where she has been living as a refugee with her children for years now. DHS would consider Zeina to be inadmissible to the U.S. for “material support” to a terrorist organization based on serving of a meal and donation of used clothing. Zeina should benefit from the insignificant assistance exemption, opening the path to refugee resettlement for her and her children, if Zeina and the children pass all security and background checks and meet all the other requirements for this exemption.
Link to Federal Register announcement:
https://www.federalregister.gov/art...12d3bi-of-the-immigration-and-nationality-act
2) Incidental contacts exemption:
This exemption applies to persons who have provided only limited material support to (1) (1) a Tier III group, (2) a member of a Tier III group, or (3) an individual whom the donor knew, or reasonably should have known, had committed or planned to commit a “terrorist activity” as defined by the INA (which, according to the government, includes any unlawful use of armed force as a non-state actor), if that limited support involves:
a) Certain routine commercial transactions
Hypothetical example: Maria ran a small restaurant in a small town in Colombia in an area where various armed groups were active. Like most restaurant owners, she served food to all her customers without political distinction, and charged everyone the same price. Among her customers were members of a paramilitary group. Maria’s family was later targeted by this same paramilitary group and, after trying and failing to find safety in other parts of Colombia, fled the country. Because this particular paramilitary organization was not listed or designated as a Tier I or Tier II group by the U.S. government at the time, Maria should be able to benefit from the exemption from the material support bar based on her routine commercial transaction with these members of the paramilitary force, whereby she served them food for which they paid the going rate.
Another hypothetical example: Maria’s sister Fernanda had a bakery in a different part of the country that came under the control of FARC guerrillas. Many people in the town, and people from surrounding areas who came into the town to bring goods to market, bought bread and Colombian pastries from this bakery. Among these customers were men Fernanda knew were affiliated with the FARC. Fernanda remains barred, according to DHS, because although her actions were identical to her sister Maria’s, the FARC was a designated (Tier I) terrorist organization at the time of these events.
b) certain routine social transactions (i.e. in satisfaction of certain well-established or verifiable family, social, or cultural obligations)
Hypothetical example: Ahmad is a 19-year-old who recently fled to Jordan with his mother and younger siblings, where they are now living as refugees. The family previously lived in Syria in an area that was under constant attack by Syrian government forces. In response to these attacks, in the summer of 2012 Ahmad’s father joined the Free Syrian Army. He was living at home or visiting frequently in the early stages of the conflict. When he was at home, his mother continued to cook meals for the whole family, including her husband, and Ahmad would serve tea and sweets to his father’s visitors when they came by the house, some of whom were also FSA members. When the situation became too dangerous, Ahmad’s mother and the children fled to safety in Jordan. Ahmad’s father was later killed in Syria. Ahmad and his mother would benefit from this exemption to the “material support” bar that DHS would otherwise apply to their ordinary acts of family solidarity and social courtesy.
c) Certain humanitarian assistance
Hypothetical example: Ibrahim is a teacher was part of a network of community activists who organized to provide assistance to the displaced in his region of Syria. They gathered donations of clothing, medical supplies, blankets, personal hygiene items, and other essentials, which they distributed to people who had fled from zones of active conflict. Ibrahim knew that some of these people were, or had been, involved with the Free Syrian Army, but distributed toothpaste and blankets to everyone. Ibrahim would not be barred from refugee protection in the United States based on his humanitarian assistance thanks to this exemption.
d) Substantial pressure that does not rise to the level of duress
Hypothetical example: On their way to Jordan, Ahmad’s mother (from the example above) gives money to members of a rebel group who assist her and her family in reaching the Jordanian border. The route to the border is under attack by Syrian government forces and the family needs this assistance in order to reach safety. The members of the rebel group were not threatening the family—they were in fact helpful to them—but Ahmad’s mother felt compelled to give them something for their assistance. This scenario should be covered by the “substantial pressure” exemption, but only if the rebel group in question was not a listed or designated group.
Another hypothetical example: David farmed a piece of land a few miles outside the village where he lived, in an area that was under the control of a rebel group. In order to access his land, which was a chief source of income for his family, he had to pay a daily “toll” to the rebel forces who controlled the road. David should be covered by this exemption—assuming he meets all the other criteria—but only if the group in question was not a Tier I or Tier II group.
Note in order to qualify under any aspect of this “incidental contacts” exemption, the applicant must show that he or she did not give whatever he or she gave “with any intent or desire to assist any terrorist organization or terrorist activity.” The idea here is that the Tier III group was really incidental to the transaction that took place, which was not focused on aiding the group but dealing with other legitimate priorities or obligations of the applicant.
Link to Federal Register announcement:
https://www.federalregister.gov/art...12d3bi-of-the-immigration-and-nationality-act
3) Additional requirements common to both exemptions:
In order to qualify for either of these exemptions, an applicant must also satisfy DHS or the State Department that he or she:
(a) Is seeking a benefit or protection under the INA and has been determined to be otherwise eligible for the benefit or protection;
(b) has undergone and passed all relevant background and security checks;
(c) has fully disclosed, in all relevant applications and/or interviews with U.S. government representatives and agents, the nature and circumstances of any material support provided and any other activity or association falling within the scope of section 212(a)(3)(B) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(3)(B), as well as all contact with a terrorist organization and its members;
(f) has not provided material support to terrorist activities that he or she knew or reasonably should have known targeted noncombatant persons, U.S. citizens, or U.S. interests;
(g) has not provided material support that the alien knew or reasonably should have known involved providing weapons, ammunition, explosives, or components thereof, or the transportation or concealment of such items;
(h) has not provided material support in the form of military-type training (as defined in section 2339D(c)(1) of title 18, United States Code);
(i) has not engaged in any other terrorist activity, including but not limited to providing material support to a designated terrorist organization, as described in section 212(a)(3)(B)(vi)(I) or (II) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(3)(B)(vi)(I) or (II), to which no other exemption applies;
(j) poses no danger to the safety and security of the United States; and
(k) warrants an exemption from the relevant inadmissibility provision in the totality of the circumstances.