Jama v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement

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Oral Argument
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Advocates
Jeffrey J. Keyes (argued the cause for Petitioner)
Malcolm L. Stewart (argued the cause for Respondent)
Case Basics
Docket No.: 
03-674
Petitioner: 
Keyse G. Jama
Respondent: 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Opinion: 
543 U.S. 335 (2005)

Cite this page
The Oyez Project, Jama v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement , 543 U.S. 335 (2005)
available at: (http://oyez.org/cases/2000-2009/2004/2004_03_674)
Facts of the Case: 

A Minnesota state court convicted Somalian refugee Keyse Jama of assault. As a result the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) argued in immigration court that Jama should be deported to Somalia. The court agreed and an immigration appeals court also agreed. Jama then appealed to a federal district court and argued the part of the U.S. Code dealing with deporting an alien to his country of birth required that country to first accept the alien. Because Somalia lacked a functioning central government, this was impossible. The district court ruled for Jama. A federal appellate court reversed and said Jama and the district court misinterpreted the law.

Question: 

May immigration officials deport a person to his country of birth under 8 U.S.C. 1231(b)(2)(E)(iv), if that country lacks a functioning central government that is able to accept the person's return?

Conclusion: 

Yes. Federal immigration law permitted an alien to be removed to a country without the advance consent of that country's government. Of the four removal options federal immigration law listed, an acceptance requirement appeared in only one clause: "...he shall be removed to another country whose government will accept him." That clause only applied after the attorney general attempted the prior deportation option. The grammatical "rule of the last antecedent," prevented "another" from applying to the earlier options. Nor did the law's structure impose an acceptance requirement. Moreover, contrary to Jama's argument, the acceptance requirement was hardly settled judicial interpretation.

Decisions

Decision: 5 votes for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, 4 vote(s) against
Legal provision: 8 U.S.C. 1231

Sort by Seniority

Voted with the minority, joined Souter's dissent
Stevens
Voted with the minority, joined Souter's dissent
Ginsburg
Wrote a dissent
Souter
Voted with the minority, joined Souter's dissent
Breyer
Voted with the majority
O'Connor
Voted with the majority
Kennedy
Voted with the majority
Rehnquist
Wrote the majority opinion
Scalia
Voted with the majority
Thomas

Full Opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia