Whether it's kidnapping, trafficking or just plain abuse, DeSantis and Abbott should be prosecuted
JON QUEALLY for Common Dreams
As Republican Governors Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas continued over the weekend to defend their plot to put refugees and migrants from Latin America on planes and busses to northern cities and communities, critics of the 'cruel' and 'immoral' actions have said the two should face investigation and ultimately criminal prosecution for misleading and mistreating the people at the center of their political gamesmanship.
Amid
confirmed reports that many of the migrants sent to Martha's Vineyard last week
by DeSantis had been misled by officials in Florida about the nature of their
trip, immigration rights legal aides have said they intend to push for legal
action to stop such abuses. As the New York Times reports:
The
lawyers said they would seek an injunction in federal court early next week to
stop the flights of migrants to cities around the country, alleging that the
Republican governor had violated due process and the civil rights of the
migrants flown from Texas to the small island off the coast of Massachusetts.
"They were told, 'You have a hearing in San Antonio, but don't worry, we'll take you to Boston'" said Iván Espinoza-Madrigal, the executive director for Lawyers for Civil Rights (LCR) Boston. He said dozens of the migrants had told his team they only had been informed midair that they were going to land in tony Martha's Vineyard rather than Boston.
Representing
more than 30 of those people brought to Martha's Vineyard with free legal
assistance, LCR said in a statement Saturday
that it has "called upon U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins and Massachusetts
Attorney General Maura Healey to formally open criminal investigations into the
political stunt that brought two planeloads of immigrants to Martha's Vineyard
earlier this week."
Detailing
"how its clients were induced to board airplanes and cross state lines
under false pretenses," the legal aid group said that only after the planes
landed did the immigrants "learn that the offers of assistance had all
been a ruse to exploit them for political purposes."
"Particularly
given the deliberate, intentional, and concerted nature of the interference by
State actors into federal immigration enforcement," LCR said "a
strong and coordinated federal response is required."
On
Saturday, a second bus from Texas loaded with migrants arrived at Vice
President Kamala's Harris' D.C. residence. According to
the Texas Tribune:
The
bus arrived before daylight outside the Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C.;
a video shared by an NBC News journalist showed migrants wearing masks and
carrying pillows walking off the bus and into a city that has declared a public
health emergency due to the influx of migrants. A spokesperson for Abbott
confirmed that the bus came from Texas.
On
Friday, Abbott's office said it had sent 8,000 migrants to the nation's capital
since announcing his busing policy in the spring. The state has also sent 2,500
migrants to New York City and 600 to Chicago. Abbott began targeting the vice
president's residency this week after she appeared on Meet the Press and said
the border was secure, stoking conservative anger.
In an interview with VICE on
Friday, Harris said the behavior of Abbott and Harris was a "dereliction
of duty" as elected public servants.
"They're
playing games," she said. "These are political stunts with real human
beings who are fleeing harm."
While some legal
experts contend that Abbott and DeSantis have acted within
their authority when shipping refugees and vulnerable immigrants across the
country to score political points, demands for prosecution or at least a
criminal probe by the Department of Justice have come from California Governor
Gavin Newsom and others.
Writing
in Jacobin magazine, former Bernie Sanders presidential
campaign manager Jeff Weaver argued that
DeSantis should be prosecuted for his unlawful conduct and that the American
people—especially given the Florida Republican's presidential ambitions—should
recognize just how abhorrent this behavior is.
"Like
Donald Trump's family separation policy, this issue runs much deeper" than
any particular position a lawmaker or politician has one immigration policy.
"It's about inhumane and illegal conduct toward vulnerable people that is
an affront to the values of every decent human being," wrote Weaver. He
continued:
Progressives
owe the country—which endured four years of lawlessness under Trump—to tell the
truth about Ron DeSantis—an aspirant to the highest office in the land. He has
demonstrated that, like Trump, he is willing to break the law to achieve political
power.
What
DeSantis did is not a political "stunt." It's a clear warning that,
as president, he, like his Republican predecessor, would view the rule of law
as a principle that is expendable when political expediency calls. And it's a
crime. He should be prosecuted for it.
In
an opinion column that appeared at Common Dreams on Saturday,
progressive radio host and author Thom Hartmann said the
behavior of Abbott and DeSantis harkens back to previous racist episodes in the
nation's past and that the two Republican governors "should be looking at
jail time or serious civil fines for engaging in this heartless, racist
sport."