FEDS Argue Return Law Makes Jews Flight
Risk
IStk Jewish Week 12/10/08
Feds Argue Return Law Makes Jews Flight Risk
In a legal argument called "astounding and very troublesome," a
federal prosecutor has argued that Israel's Law of Return makes American
Jews a flight risk and therefore ineligible for bail.
The claim,
believed to be unprecedented, came in the bank fraud case of Sholom
Rubashkin, the former Jewish head of the embattled Iowa kosher
slaughterhouse, Agriprocessors, Inc.
And the federal judge in
the case, Magistrate Jon Stuart Scoles, cited the Law of Return in his
Nov. 20 decision denying Rubashkin bail.
"Under Israel's Law of
Return, any Jew and members of his family who have expressed their
desire to settle in Israel will be granted citizenship," the judge
wrote, adding that the government had claimed that at least one other
Agriprocessors'
defendant had already fled to Israel.
Rubashkin's lawyers wrote in their appeal filed last Friday: "It is
ironic that a law designed to provide refuge to persecuted Jews has now
become the basis for detaining a Jew who might otherwise have been
released pending trial."
Deborah Lauter, director of the civil
rights office of the Anti-Defamation League, said the prosecution's
"referencing the Law of Return is highly unusual."
Marc Stern,
acting co-executive director of the American Jewish Congress, called the
move "very troublesome."
"All Jews are suspect because of the
Law of Return?" he asked. "It's a very astounding and troubling
argument. It's different from saying he might run to Israel - whether or
not there is a Law of Return."
Stern said the government's argument
is "probably impermissible, but it's hard to say without being more
closely involved. ... I think it's an argument that's too aggressive and
I think they need to justify it by evidence that I can't imagine them
producing."
In last Friday's legal papers, defense attorneys for
Rubashkin asked Scoles to reconsider his decision. And, in order to
preserve their right to appeal, they also filed papers with federal
District Court Judge Linda Reade in the event Scoles does not grant
Rubashkin bail.
Defense attorneys F. Montgomery Brown and Guy
Cook argued in their papers that the U.S. has an extradition treaty with
Israel and that therefore "the Law of Return should have played no role
whatsoever in the analysis."
They noted that when they argued
that position in court, the office of U.S.
Attorney Matt M.
Dummermuth countered by insisting that the extradition process "could
take years." And the prosecutor also introduced a copy of the Law of
Return.
The defense attorneys said their research "has not
uncovered a single instance involving a Jewish criminal defendant where
the prosecution invoked the Law of Return in support of detention."
And they quoted an attorney with years of experience in the Brooklyn and
Manhattan federal district courts as saying he too could "recall no
instance where the prosecutor invoked the Law of Return in arguing that
an American Jew is a bail risk."
Bob Teig, a spokesman for
Dummermuth's office, said the defense papers were filed last Friday and
that "we have had no chance to file a response."
Asked if the
defense's characterization of the government's argument was correct, he
replied: "The judge's order speaks for itself."
Laura Sweeney, a
Justice Department spokesperson, said when asked about the prosecutor's
argument, "This is an ongoing matter and therefore the department
declines comment."
In their request to deny bail after his
second arrest in November - he had been arrested in October on charges
alleging that he hired illegal workers for his plant - prosecutors noted
that Rubashkin had $20,000 in his home, much of it in a travel bag that
also contained his birth certificate and his children's passports; he
has 10 children. He and his wife surrendered their passports after
Rubashkin's first arrest.
One of Rubashkin's lawyers, Baruch
Weiss of New York, acknowledged the cash was in the house but said that
much of it was in one-dollar bills that had been collected for charity.
And he said the rest was used to pay expense. He noted that a $1,700 car
bill had recently been paid in cash.
Rubaskin's Iowa defense
team contended in their papers that in "the prosecutors' view, anyone
subject to the Law of Return is an increased flight risk. Consequently,
under that view, 'every Jew' is to be viewed for bail purposes as a
greater risk of flight than a non-Jew. That means that
5.3 million
Americans would be viewed as heightened bail risks simply because they
are Jews."
They pointed out that would include Attorney General
Michael Mukasey, Homeland Security head Michael Chertoff and two U.S.
Supreme Court Justices, Steven Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
In their papers, the defense lawyers said the extradition treaty the
U.S.
has with Israel "has always been workable," and that after
recent amendments it is "now better than workable."
"It applies
to everyone, Jews and non-Jews," they said. "It even applies to
Israelis. This treaty will ensure that Rubashkin - even if he were to
become a citizen of Israel under the Law of Return - will be returned to
the United States, tried in the United States and if convicted, that he
will serve any sentence in the United States. Were he to flee to Israel,
he would be detained pending extradition. Because of this treaty, the
Law of Return is irrelevant."
In addition, the defense lawyers
said that by denying Rubashkin bail, the court was denying him the
constitutional right to equal protection.
"Jews are a protected
class for Equal Protection purposes," they wrote.
"Thus, singling
Jews out in any way when determining bail is unconstitutional...
"The government has failed to demonstrate a compelling government
interest in a rule that implicates all Jews, and has failed to
demonstrate that its interest here cannot be met with a more narrowly
tailored approach. ... The government introduced no evidence that Jews
are more likely to flee because of the Law of Return than non-Jews."
The defense lawyers concluded that "rather than locking Jews up with
greater frequency, the United States could rely on a general array of
bail conditions, and then utilize the valid, streamlined,
regularly-invoked extradition treaty with Israel in those few cases
where the defendant actually flees. Certainly it is better to have the
government on rare occasions be forced to resort to this streamlined
extradition than to brand over 5 million Americans a bail risks. ...
Otherwise, the government slurs Americans because of a law passed by a
foreign country over which these Americans have no control and which
they may have no desire to invoke."
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