Diouf v. Napolitano

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  • Case Information

    Full Name : Amadou Lamine Diouf v. Janet Napolitano, Secretary, Department of Homeland Security;* Julie L. Myers, Assistant Secretary, United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement; Norma Bonales- Garibay, Field Office Director US Immigration and Customs Enforcement; George Molinar, Chief of Detention and Removal Operations, San Pedro Detention Facility; Stuart Cortez, Officer in-Charge, San Pedro Detention Facility; Eric H. Holder, Jr., Attorney General

    Case Number : CV067452

    Court : United States District Court for the Central District of California

    Judge :

    Co-Counsel : ACLU Immigrants Rights Project; Stanford Immigrants’ Rights Clinic

    Diouf v. Napolitano set important precedent on the due process rights of detained immigrants.  The government detained Mr. Diouf — a Senegalese native who came the United States on a student visa, obtained a college degree and married a United States citizen – for over 19 months without ever providing him a hearing before an immigration judge where he could seek release on bond.  The Ninth Circuit ultimately held that the government violated Mr. Diouf’s rights, and established that the government cannot detain noncitizens like Mr. Diouf for more than six months without providing a bond hearing where it must justify such lengthy detention.

    Case Developments

    UPDATE
    April 21, 2011

    The ACLU/SC developed a practice advisory for practitioners and pro se detainees on how to request a bond hearing that complies with the Ninth Circuit decision. Read the practice advisory.

    RULING
    March 7, 2011

    This landmark Ninth Circuit ruling established a time period of six months that limits how long the government can detain noncitizens in Mr. Diouf’s position without providing them a bond hearing. Read the ruling.

    FILING
    November 21, 2006

    The habeas petition provides background on Mr. Diouf’s long residence in the United States, and the government’s minimal paper reviews that led to his unjustified detention. Read the habeas petition.