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8 Air & Space Law. 1 (1993-1994)

handle is hein.journals/airspaclaw8 and id is 1 raw text is: 

       Forum on
     Air and Space
           Law
American Bar Association


THE AIR AND SPACE LAWYER


Volume 8, Number 1


Summer 1993


Immigration Fines and the Airlines Industry

                                      BY CONSTANCE O'KEEFE*


    Passengers slitting their
wrists at entrances to jet ways,
passengers held in indefinite
custody at airline expense in
inotel rooms, in sonie extreme
cases chained to beds, passen-
gers stripping naked in transit
lounges, passengers attacking
airline personnel....

These are not the sensation-
alistic details of a bad TV
movie from sweeps week.
They are now regular occur-


-('1

h~'j


rences in the airline industry: situations international
carriers and their employees face every day. And, in-
creasingly, they are issues for aviation law practitioners.
    I was first overwhelmed personally the day I wit-
nessed a passenger hold a knife to his throat rather than
leave the transit lounge at LAX International Airport. I
was first overwhelmed professionally when a client called
and asked what it should do about the more than 300
immigration fines that had accumulated in less than a
three-month period.
    All this to do is a result of a mix of law and policy
choices and missteps on political asylum issues-a topic
steeped in history but one fraught with emotion and as
contemporary as today's headlines.
    Motivated by valid humanitarian concerns, the
United States grants all who request political asylum a
full opportunity to demonstrate the well-founded fear
of persecution' that guarantees refuge in the United
States. These broad rights are conferred on all, even those
who otherwise have extremely limited rights under U.S.
immigration laws.- The asylum law trumps all other
laws, deliberately so. Unfortunately, it has also opened
a loophole for those seeking entry to the United States.
Merely uttering the words political asylum at a U.S.
airport entitles any passenger to all the rights available
under the asylum law-and entr6e to the U.S. not avail-
able any other way so readily.

*Constance O'Keefe practices aviation law in Washington, D.C., fo-
cusing on international issues.


    Common current schemes include the following:
     using good quality counterfeit or photo substituted
      documents sufficient tj pass even the most diligent car-
      rier scrutiny for boarding a U.S.-bound flight and then
      either destroying the documents on board or passing
      them off to an accomplice, and requestintg political asy-
      lum upon disembarking.
    * traveling to the U.S, as a TWOV -a transit without
      a visa passenger scheduled to merely pass through the
      United States-and requesting political asylum upon
      arriving at the U.S. airport.
    High drama also occurs regularly at airports where
the Immigration & Naturalization Service (INS) de-
mands that carriers take custody of certain categories of
arriving passengers who request political asylum. Al-
though it usually releases asylum-seekers rather than de-
taining them itself,' the INS nevertheless asserts that
carriers must keep such passengers in detention pending
determination of their asylum claims-a process that can
take years. When carriers disagree, local INS officials have
frequently responded with threats to cancel transit
agreements, revoke landing rights, and seize aircraft. As
a result, in the motels and hotels around airports such as
JFK, the carriers are operating unofficial jails.
    Frustrated by INS policies that forced them into the
role of jailers, the industry sued the INS more than a
year ago, but the litigation remains stalled in federal dis-
trict court in Washington, D.C.' Meanwhile, detention
costs continue to mount. Many carriers have spent half
a million dollars or more keeping asylum-seekers in cus-
tody. Fines, too, are piling up. It is not unusual for a
major carrier to owe the U.S. government more than $1
million a year in fines for bringing improperly docu-
mented passengers to the United States.
    The asylum issue involves desperate individuals, al-
most unbearable strains on airline operations and airline
personnel, and huge expenses an industry in crisis can
ill afford. This article focuses on legal issues with respect
to fines, after a brief review of the asylum law of the
United States. The detention issue, which is not explored
in detail here, is the other major immigration issue facing
the industry. Its resolution awaits decision in the indus-
try lawsuit and/or the cases of several individual carriers
now pending before various courts.
                                 (continued on page 3)

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