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This ICE graphic is pretty chilling
Ideas?
This is basic, 1L level con law. One would hope that the fuckers on SCOTUS remember it.The "no one is entitled to a visa" argument reminds me of the AP opinion just handed down by the Supreme Court.
The US does not need to grant a visa, but if it chooses to do so, it cannot then engage in viewpoint discrimination about revocation. The AP does not have the right to enter the Oval Office, but if that right is granted to some press, you can't discriminate against the AP simply because it won't play along with Trump's fiction that the Gulf of Mexico should be called the Gulf of America.
Likewise, you can't discriminate against visa holders based on whether they have a red, green, black and white flag or a blue and white flag on their social media channel.
I just hope they can find and read the Constitution again.This is basic, 1L level con law. One would hope that the fuckers on SCOTUS remember it.
That would have gotten your visa cancelled under most presidents.Saw a case yesterday of a student at UF who was caught driving with a suspended license (for a second time). Revoked.
The questions surrounding student visas are far more complicated that that snippet would let on. I'm not sure the Fifth Amendment is even relevant here because a student visa does not carry any property interests or reliance interests. So I think what that says about "non-based threats" means as long as the visa remains valid. But the state department can revoke a student visa at its discretion; they don't need the AEA for that.Revoking F-1 and J-1 visas are a dire problem, regardless of whether they protested and what they said...whether I agreed or not.
A Google summary:
The Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution protects legal non-immigrants students on F-1 visa from false accusation or non-based threats for deportation. You are presumed to be innocent until found guilty by a court. The burden of proof is on the prosecution.
That would have gotten your visa cancelled under most presidents.
When we’re you in grad school?I believe in most states that's still a misdemeanor, which in the past has not led to a visa getting revoked.
Had friends in grad school who got busted for DUI (on the first week of school, two guys, same spot, 30 minutes apart by the same cop). Lost their driving privileges, but didn't lose their visas.