*307 RULING ON PETITION FOR HABEAS CORPUS [DKT. NO. 1]
The petitioner, Brandon Small, is a lawful permanent resident alien who is currently being detained at the Hartford Community Correctional Center. After serving a five-year sentence for possession of cocaine with intent to sell, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) apprehended and detained the petitioner in August 2000 for removal pi-oceedings pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii). An Immigration Judge has found him removable, but another Immigration Judge further found that the petitioner is eligible for discretionary relief from deportation under former section 212(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c). An individual hearing on the petitioner’s section 212(c) request is pending.
The petitioner filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus in this court on November 7, 2000. The court issued an Order to Show Cause on November 14, 2000, and the court heard oral argument on December 6, 2000. The petitioner seeks a writ ordering the INS to provide the petitioner with a bond hearing before an Immigration Judge. For the reasons below, the Petition [Dkt. No. 1] is granted.
I. FACTS
The following facts are not in dispute. The petitioner came to the United States in 1979 at the age of 7. He currently enjoys the status of a lawful permanent resident alien. The petitioner has two children, ages six and seven, with his girlfriend, Silvia Mejil, who is a U.S. citizen. He lived with them in Waterbury, Connecticut, prior to his imprisonment on a state court conviction on August 28, 1995, for drug possession with intent to sell. The petitioner’s parents and his two brothers also live in Waterbury and are all citizens or permanent resident aliens. The petitioner’s grandmother is a U.S. citizen and lives in New York.
The petitioner completed drug rehabilitation and career counseling programs in state prison while serving his sentence of ten years imprisonment, suspended after five years. In August 2000, the petitioner was released into the custody of the INS pursuant to a Notice to Appear for removal proceedings served on the petitioner in prison on October 22, 1999. He remains detained without bond at the Hartford Community Correctional Center at the present time.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction'
As the respondent concedes, there are no issues with regard to the court’s jurisdiction over this petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241.
See Calcano-Martinez v. INS,
B. The mandatory detention statute, INA § 236(c)
As part of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (“IIRIRA”), Pub.L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 2009-546, Congress enacted section 236(c) of the INA, a mandatory detention provision. This section provides, in pertinent part:
(1) Custody
The Attorney General shall take into custody any alien who—
(A) is inadmissible by reason of having committed any offense covered in section 1182(a)(2) of this title,
(B) is deportable by reason of having committed any offense covered in section 1227(a)(2)(A)(ii), (A)(iii), (B), (C), or (D) of this title.
(C) is deportable under section 1227(a)(2)(A)© of this title on the basis of an offense for which the alien has *308 been sentence [d] to a term of imprisonment of at least 1 year, or
(D) is inadmissible under section 1182(a)(3)(B) of this title or deportable under section 1227(a)(4)(B) of this title, when the alien is released, without regard to whether the alien is released on parole, supervised release, or probation, and without regard to whether the alien may be arrested or imprisoned again for the same offense.
8 U.S.C. § 1226(c)(1). The Attorney General has discretion to release such an alien only when he or she is participating in the federal Witness Protection Program “and the alien satisfies the Attorney General that the alien will not pose a danger to the safety of other persons or of property and is likely to appear for any scheduled proceeding.” Id. § 1226(c)(2). There is no other release provision under section 236(c). However, once an order of removal becomes administratively final, if the alien is not removed within 90 days, the alien becomes eligible for release from custody under INA § 241. See 8 U.S.C. § 1231(a); 8 C.F.R. § 241.1 et seq.
For purposes of the present petition, it should suffice to observe that the Immigration Judge found that the petitioner had been mandatorily detained under section 1226(c)(1)(B), in accordance with 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii): “Any alien who is convicted of an aggravated felony at any time after admission is deportable.” Under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43), “[t]he term ‘aggravated felony’ means — ... (B) illicit trafficking in a controlled substance (as defined in section 802 of Title 21), including a drug trafficking crime (as defined in section 924(c) of Title 18).” 1
Specifically, the Immigration Judge found on October 13, 1999, that the petitioner is “not a citizen or national of the United States,” is “a native of Trinidad/Tobago and citizen of Trinidad/Tobago,” was “admitted to the United States at New York, New York on or about October 6, 1979 as an Immigrant,” and was “on September 16, 1995, convicted in Superior Court at Waterbury, Connecticut for the offense of ‘Possession of Narcotics with intent to Sell’ in violation of Connecticut General Statutes, section 21a-277(a).” The Immigration Judge concluded that,
[o]n the basis of the foregoing, it is charged that you are subject to removal from the United States pursuant to ...: Section 237(a)(2)(A)(iii) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act), as amended, in that, at any time after admission, you have been convicted of an aggravated felony as defined in section 101(a)(43)(3) of the Act, that is, an offense relating to the illicit trafficking in a controlled substance, as described in section 102 of the Controlled Substance Act including a drug trafficking crime, as defined in section 924(c) of Title 18, United States Code.
On October 25, 2000, an Immigration Judge found that he had no jurisdiction to heai’ the petitioner’s request for release on bond because the petitioner “has a final conviction for an offense within the scope of section 236(c)(1) of the [INA],” and “[t]herefore, the Court lacks jurisdiction to redetermine the [petitioner’s] custody status. See 8 C.F.R. § 3.19(h)(2)(i)(D) (1999).” Section 3.19(h)(2)(i)(D) of Title 8 of the Code of Federal Regulations provides that “an immigration judge may not redetermine conditions of custody imposed by the Service with respect to the following classes of aliens: ... (D) Aliens in removal proceedings subject to section *309 236(c)(1) of the Act....” More specifically, the Immigration Judge noted that another Immigration Judge “determined that the [Immigration and Naturalization] Service had met its burden of proof of establishing by clear and convincing evidence that the [petitioner] is subject to removal because of a conviction for an aggravated felony.”
There is no dispute in this case that the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision applies to the petitioner and that the petitioner is removable and will be removed unless he prevails on his request for a INA § 212(c) waiver of deportation. It is also undisputed that the petitioner is not under an administratively final order of removal, which would trigger the detention and release provisions of INA § 241.
C. INA § 212(c) waiver of deportation
“Under the law in effect prior to the enactment of the [Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”) ], certain aliens otherwise determined to be deportable were entitled to apply to the Attorney General or her delegates, [including the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) and Immigration Judges,] for a waiver of deportation under INA § 212(c), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (1994).”
St. Cyr,
Aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence who temporarily proceeded abroad voluntarily and not under an order of deportation, and who are returning to a lawful unrelinquished domicile of seven consecutive years, may be admitted in the discretion of the Attorney General without regard to [provisions setting forth various grounds for exclusion] .... The first sentence of this subsection shall not apply to an alien who has been convicted of one or more aggravated felonies and has served for such felony or felonies a term of imprisonment of at least five years.
8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (1994) (repealed by IIR-IRA § 304(b),
Discretionary relief from deportation, which has been available in our system in some form since at least 1917, see Francis [v. INS,532 F.2d 268 , 270 (2d Cir.1976) ], provides the Attorney General with a mechanism to consider the impact of immigration on an alien’s family. Prior to 1996, INA § 212(c) gave power to the Attorney General to permit a worthy alien to stay in this country in order to avoid extraordinary hardship to the alien’s family in the United States. See id. at 272. In a case where a convicted alien demonstrated that he or she had a lawful unrelinquished domicile in the United States for at least seven years and that his or her conviction was not for an “aggravated felony,” for which he or she had served a term of imprisonment of five years or longer, the Attorney General could, in her discretion, waive deportation. See 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (1994). Under the law in effect before 1996, if the Attorney General denied relief, the alien could challenge that denial by filing a petition for review in the court of appeals. See 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a) (1994) (repealed by IIRIRA § 306(b),110 Stat. at 3009-612 , Sept. 30, 1996).
Following an Immigration Judge’s decision on a section 212(c) request, the BIA, from which an Immigration Judge’s decision on a section 212(c) request could be administratively appealed, has “very broad discretion ... with respect to discretionary waivers of deportation pursuant to INA
*310
§ 212(c).”
Pillay v. INS,
IIRIRA entirely repealed INS § 212(c).
Calcano-Martinez,
D. Substantive due process challenge to section 236(c)
The petitioner argues that his mandatory detention under section 236(c) is unconstitutional as applied to him because it violates his substantive due process right to be free from restraint of his liberty without a detention hearing. The respondents counter that, while detained pending removal proceedings, the petitioner does not have a fundamental liberty interest to be free from confinement or a liberty interest in release from custody.
The court must engage in a multi-step analysis to resolve the petitioner’s substantive due process claim. First, the court must determine whether the petitioner is making a facial or as-applied challenge to section 236(c). Second, the court must determine what standard of review to apply in assessing the constitutionality of section 236(c). This step requires the court to identify the liberty interest upon which the petitioner is relying and to determine whether that interest implicates a fundamental right. Third, the court must assess the constitutionality of the statute at issue, section 236(c) of the INA, under the appropriate standard of substantive due process review.
1. The petitioner raises an as-applied challenge
Turning to the issue of whether the petitioner has raised a facial or as-applied challenge to the constitutionality of section 236(c), the court concludes that the petitioner’s substantive due process challenge to the section 236(c) mandatory detention statute is an as-applied challenge, as the petitioner frames the claim, and not a facial challenge, as the respondents portray it. The respondents conflate the standard of review to be applied to the petitioner’s challenge with the threshold issue of whether the petitioner is challenging section 236(c) facially or only as applied to the petitioner.
See, e.g.,
Respondents’ Response at 20. At least one court in this district has found for a petitioner on an as-applied substantive due process challenge to section 236(c).
See Rogowski v. Reno,
Based on the same reasoning applied by the
Rogowski
court, the court will treat Small’s challenge as an as-applied, and not a facial, substantive due process challenge, since the liberty interest implicated by Small’s mandatory detention is crucially dependent upon the particular facts of the petitioner’s case,
i.e.,
his impending section 212(c) hearing. By way of contrast, in
Reno v. Flores,
the Supreme Court decided a facial challenge to INS regulation 242.24, which had not yet been applied to the petitioners in that case.
2. The petitioner asserts a fundamental liberty interest
Turning to the merits of the petitioner’s as-applied substantive due process claim, the court notes that the substantive component of the due process clause of the fifth amendment “forbids the government to infringe certain ‘fundamental’ liberty interests at all, no matter what process is provided, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.”
Id.
at 302,
“Substantive due process analysis must begin with a careful description of the asserted right, for [t]he doctrine of judicial self-restraint requires us to exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field.”
Flores,
“A liberty interest may arise from either of two sources — the Due Process Clause itself [or] the laws of the States.”
Rodriguez v. McLoughlin,
While seeking to identify the liberty interest the petitioner is claiming, it is important to note that, whatever may be entailed in the respondents’ argument that the petitioner is “removable” by virtue of the Immigration Judge’s determination that the petitioner “is subject to removal because of a conviction for an aggravated felony,” there is no dispute that the petitioner is not yet subject to an administratively final order of removal. It is well-settled that “[a] lawful permanent resident who commits a removable or deportable offense remains a lawful permanent resident until an administratively final order of removal- or deportation deprives him of that status.”
In re Mendoza-Sandino,
Interim Dec. 3426,
The petitioner, therefore, remains a lawful permanent resident alien, entitled to the constitutionally-protected liberty interests that flow from that status. The Second Circuit has held that, “under the due process clause of the fifth amendment, aliens ... possess a substantive due process right to liberty during deportation proceedings.”
Doherty,
Following these precedents, the Second Circuit has held that “aliens do have a substantive due process right to be free of arbitrary confinement pending deportation proceedings.”
Doherty,
The Second Circuit has also held, however, that “this is a narrow right and that judicial review of alleged interference with the right by the federal government is limited.” Id. at 208. The Court of Appeals discussed at length the limits on aliens’ substantive due process rights:
It is axiomatic, however, that an alien’s right to be at liberty during the course of deportation proceedings is circumscribed by considerations of the national interest. Control over matters of ■immigration and naturalization is the “inherent and inalienable right of every sovereign and independent nation.” ... Under the United States Constitution, such control is vested in the political branches of government.... Congressional power in this area is plenary, subject to only limited judicial review. ... In exercising its broad power over immigration and naturalization, “Congress regularly makes rules that would be unacceptable if applied to citizens.” ... Governmental conduct that may be considered “shocking” when it serves to deprive the life, liberty or property of a citizen may not be unconstitutional when directed at an alien.
Id. at 209 (citations omitted).
The court notes, however, that the Supreme Court has also held that, although “[t]he plenary authority of Congress over aliens under Art. I, § 8, cl. 4 is not open to question, ... what is challenged here is whether Congress has chosen a constitutionally permissible means of implementing that power.”
INS v. Chadha,
of
*314 [A] distinction must be made between Congress’ power over substantive immigration laws and its power to legislate rules implementing those laws. “Congress’ broad authority over immigration has traditionally extended to decisions about what classes of aliens are admissible and deportable and under what circumstances.” ... Aliens challenging section 236(c) do not challenge Congress’ ability to detain or deport them based on their criminal history.... Rather, they challenge the implementation of that decision and Congress’ ability to indefinitely detain them, without any possibility of release on bond, pending administrative proceedings.
Welch v. Reno,
The court concludes that the petitioner has a fundamental liberty interest in freedom from restraint without a detention or bond hearing during his removal proceedings, ie., the petitioner’s “interest is that of an individual, detained pending judicial proceedings, to receive a bail hearing in which a judge determines the individual’s flight risk and threat to the community.” Id. at 353. The petitioner has no final order of removal entered against him and is accordingly remains a lawful permanent resident.
The court recognizes that, “[a]lthough substantive due process rights are guaranteed to an individual, in part, through the liberty component of the Due Process Clause, ..., this does not mean that a fundamental right is implicated every time a governmental regulation intrudes on an individual’s ‘liberty.’ ”
Immediato v. Rye Neck Sch. Dist.,
The court finds that section 236(c) implicates such a freedom, however, .and the
respondents’ reliance on the Supreme Court’s holding in
Flores
does not counsel otherwise. Indeed, the
Flores
case is readily distinguishable from the petitioner’s claim here. The
Flores
Court emphasized the unique factual circumstances of the juvenile petitioners who sought to vindicate “the alleged right of a child who has no available parent, close relative, or legal guardian, and for whom the government is responsible, to be placed in the custody of a willing-and-able private custodian rather than of a government-operated or government-selected child-care institution.”
In contrast to the regulation at issue in
Flores,
the section 236 mandatory detention provision applies to adults and involves what is indisputably detention in prison settings and not the “legal custody” of children in open settings. The Supreme Court, in the context of pretrial detention of adults under the Bail Reform Act, has recognized the individual’s “strong interest in liberty” as well as “the importance and fundamental nature of this right.”
Salerno,
3. Section 236(c) is excessive in relation to its purposes
Having found that the petitioner’s challenge implicates a fundamental liberty interest, the court must determine whether the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest. Specifically, the court looks to the test applied in
Salerno,
in which the Supreme Court considered a substantive due process challenge to a pretrial detention statute. Under the
Salerno
test, “the challenged statute must be regulatory, not punitive and if the statute is regulatory, it must not appear excessive in relation to the purpose behind the statute.”
Avramenkov v. INS,
Applying the first part of this test, the
Salerno
Court “concluded that the detention imposed by the [Bail Reform] Act falls on the regulatory side of the dichotomy [between impermissible punishment or permissible regulation].”
The court must then consider whether the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision is excessive in relation to the purposes behind the statute,
i.e.,
whether it is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest. Congress has made clear its purposes in passing this provision. “In passing IIRIRA, Congress articulated the following reasons for including a mandatory detention provision: (1) protecting the public from potentially dangerous criminal aliens; (2) risk of flight during removal proceedings; (3) insuring attendance at removal hearings; and (4) restoring the public’s faith in the immigration system.”
Zgombic v. Farquharson,
The court must therefore assess whether the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision is excessive in relation to these
*316
purposes or are insufficiently narrowly tailored to serve compelling government interests. The legislative history of IIRIRA indicates that “[m]any criminal aliens who are released pending their deportation never appear for their deportation proceedings” and that “over 20 percent of non-detained criminal aliens do not appear for their deportation proceedings.” S.Rep. No. 104-48, reprinted in
The primary risk arises from the twenty percent of criminal aliens who abscond during proceedings. Eighty percent do not abscond. Petitioner asserts that he is not a flight risk. The statute’s flaw is that it does not allow petitioner to substantiate this assertion at a hearing. A hearing presents a readily available, less restrictive means for the government to achieve its purposes .... Due process does not allow attribution to a large, diverse group characteristics demonstrated to be applicable to only a small number.... Detention of aliens and others have been upheld on account of some discretion or the existence of another opportunity for relief.
The court notes, however, that the Supreme Court has upheld similar pretrial detention provisions under the Bail Reform Act in Salerno. However, the differences between the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision that the petitioner challenges and the Bail Reform Act provisions upheld in Salerno illustrate the failure of Congress to narrowly tailor the operation of section 236(c) to meet the purposes behind its enactment. Indeed, the Supreme Court in the later case Fou-cha thoroughly distinguished its holding in Salerno on grounds very relevant to the instant analysis:
We observed in Salerno that the “government’s interest in preventing crime by arrestees is both legitimate and compelling,” ... and that the statute involved there was a constitutional implementation of that interest. The statute carefully limited the circumstances under which detention could be sought to those involving the most serious of crimes (crimes of violence, offenses punishable by life imprisonment or death, serious drug offenses, or certain repeat offenders), ..., and was narrowly fo- *317 eused on a particularly acute problem in which the government interests are overwhelming.... In addition to first demonstrating probable cause, the Government was required, in a “full-blown adversary hearing,” to convince a neutral decisionmaker by clear and convincing evidence that no conditions of release can reasonably assure the safety of the community or any person, ie., that the “arrestee presents an identified and articulable threat to an individual or the community.” ... Furthermore, the duration of confinement under the Bail Reform Act of 1984(Act) was strictly limited. The arrestee was entitled to a prompt detention hearing and the maximum length of pretrial detention was limited by the “stringent time limitations of the Speedy Trial Act.” ... If the arrestee were convicted, he would be confined as a criminal proved guilty; if he were acquitted, he would go free. Moreover, the Act required that detainees be housed, to the extent practicable, in a facility separate from persons awaiting or serving sentences or awaiting appeal.
“ “In our society liberty is the norm, and detention prior to trial or without trial is the carefully limited exception.” The narrowly focused pretrial detention of arrestees permitted by the Bail Reform Act was found to be one of those carefully limited exceptions permitted by the Due Process Clause. We decline to take a similar view of a law like Louisiana’s, which permits the indefinite detention of insanity aequittees who are not mentally ill but who do not prove they would not be dangerous to others.”
Id.
at 83,
Like the statute that the Supreme Court held to be unconstitutional in Foucha, and unlike the statute that the Supreme Court upheld in Salerno, section 236(c) does not strictly limit the duration of mandatory detention. The overreaching nature of section 236(c) is demonstrated by comparison to the detention provisions under section 241(a), which provide for discretionary release if an alien is not removed within 90 days of an order of removal becoming administratively final. The court concludes that section 236(c) is excessive in relation to its purposes as applied to the petitioner, because it mandates the detention of the petitioner, a lawful permanent resident alien who may yet be allowed to remain permanently in the country, for four months and counting, without any exercise of discretion on the part of the INS or the Attorney General, while aliens who are no longer, and may be never been, lawful permanent residents and who will immi *318 nently be removed may be released at the discretion of the Attorney General if they are not removed within three months.
Section 236(c) is also excessive in relation to its purposes because it does not provide for an adversary hearing in which the INS must convince a neutral decision-maker by clear and convincing evidence that no conditions of release for the petitioner can reasonably assure the safety of the community or any person. The respondents argue that mandatory detention without a bond hearing is not excessive in relation to its purposes because the aliens, like the petitioner, who are subject to section 236(c) have been convicted of serious crimes. This argument, however, cannot be squared with the regulatory, not punitive, purposes which section 236(c) detention and removal generally are designed to serve. As the
Rogowski
court noted, “[t]he Fifth Amendment does not permit punishment of criminal aliens a second time through the immigration laws.”
Most importantly, section 236(c) is excessive in relation to its regulatory purposes because, unlike the Bail Reform Act, it does not entitle those who fall within the mandatory detention provision to a detention or bond hearing at all. Section 236(c) does not even create a presumption of detainability with the opportunity for the petitioner to rebut that presumption. As one district court quite reasonably concluded when faced with the same issue, “Congress’ use of a blanket, irrefutable presumption is excessive in relation to its purpose of preventing flight and future crimes; a bail hearing could address the individual detainee’s danger to the community.”
Welch,
The court is aware, as the respondents argue, that “ ‘Congress regularly makes rules [for aliens] that would be unacceptable if applied to citizens’ ” and that “[g]ov-ernmental conduct that may be considered ‘shocking’ when it serves to deprive the life, liberty or property of a citizen may not be unconstitutional when directed at an alien.”
Doherty,
The Supreme Court, however, has held that “once an alien gains admission to our country and begins to develop the ties that go with permanent residence his constitutional status changes accordingly.”
Plasencia,
*319 The respondents further argue that the holding in Doherty that Doherty’s detention did not violate substantive due process dictates that the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision does not violate substantive due process. The court finds that Small’s petition is distinguishable from Do-herty, where the Second Circuit observed:
Moreover, from the outset of his detention, Doherty has possessed, in effect, the key that unlocks his prison cell. That is, if Doherty had agreed to deportation in the first place, he would not have been detained at MCC for the past eight years.... Because deportation was less attractive to him than his present course and because he has availed himself of the statutory mechanisms provided for aliens facing deportation, Doherty is subject to the countervailing measures Congress has enacted to ensure the protection of national interests.
For the reasons discussed above, the court concludes that the petitioner has a substantive due process right to be free from arbitrary confinement without a bond hearing while his removal proceedings are pending. Applying the Salerno test, the court concludes that the mandatory detention provision of section 236(c) is excessive in relation to the purposes behind the statute as applied to the petitioner, in view of the petitioner’s status as a lawful permanent resident alien who is statutorily eligible for a section 212(c) waiver of removal. Thus, the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision violates substantive due process as applied to the petitioner. The court emphasizes that this holding is limited to the conclusion that the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision is unconstitutional as applied to this petitioner, who is a lawful permanent resident alien being detained without a bond hearing while awaiting a hearing on the section 212(c) relief from removal for which he is statutorily eligible.
E. Procedural due process challenge to section 236(c)
The petitioner also alleges that the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision violates his procedural due process rights because it forecloses any individualized determination of the petitioner’s flight risk or dangerousness to the community while his removal proceedings are pending. “When government action depriving a person of life, liberty, or property survives substantive due process scrutiny, it must still be implemented in a fair manner.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
*320
To state a claim for a violation of procedural due process, “a plaintiff must demonstrate that he or she possesses a constitutionally protected interest in life, liberty, or property, and that state action has deprived him or her of that interest.”
Valmonte v. Bane,
The liberty interest at stake in the petitioner’s procedural due process challenge to section 236(c) is the same as the petitioner raised on his as-applied substantive due process claim: a fundamental liberty interest in freedom from restraint without a detention or bond hearing during his removal proceedings.
See supra
at 312. To answer the second question, the Supreme Court has noted that “[d]ue process, as this Comb often has said, is a flexible concept that varies with the particular situation.”
Zinermon v. Burch,
[fjirst, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.
Eldridge,
“Applying this test, the Court usually has held that the Constitution requires some kind of a hearing before the State deprives a person of liberty or property.”
Zinermon,
As to the first
Eldridge
factor, in the context of removal or deportation proceedings, the Supreme Court has recognized that a permanent resident alien’s interest in freedom from restraint during removal proceedings “is, without question, a weighty one.”
Plasencia,
The Second Circuit has recently considered this first
Eldridge
factor in
Abdullah v. INS,
Additionally, the petitioner asserts an interest in freedom from custody in order to facilitate a stronger showing of rehabilitation at his section 212(c) hearing. The BIA has “recognize[d] that it is more difficult for confined aliens to establish rehabilitation than for those who are at liberty....”
Matter of Roberts,
20 I. & N. Dec. 294, 299 (BIA 1991). This interest in freedom from custody while awaiting a section 212(c) hearing is not preeminent since an alien’s confinement “does not preclude [the BIA] from considering rehabilitation as a significant discretionary factor.”
Id.
The interest in freedom from restraint pending a section 212(c) hearing is, however, particularly important for the petitioner, because “[d]rug offenders must present a showing of unusual or outstanding countervailing equities to obtain a waiver, particularly if the grounds for exclusion involved trafficking in drugs.”
Correa v. Thornburgh,
As to the second
Eldridge
factor, the court finds that the risk of erroneous deprivation of the petitioner’s liberty interest under section 236(c) is slight where, as in
Avramenkov
and as is the case here, the petitioner does not dispute that he has a conviction for an “aggravated felony” and is covered by the operation of the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision.
See Avramenkov,
Finally, as to the third Eldridge factor, the court notes that the Zgombic court has well summarized the government’s interest in maintaining section 236(c) mandatory detention without a detention hearing, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the addi *322 tional or substitute procedural requirement would entail:
“The government’s interest in efficient administration of the immigration laws at the border [ ] is weighty.” Plasencia,459 U.S. at 34 ,103 S.Ct. 321 .... Accordingly, the government has an obvious, important interest in avoiding the necessity of holding parole hearings for all alien aggravated felons. Moreover, “it must weigh heavily in the balance [of the Eldridge factors] that control over matters of immigration is a sovereign prerogative, largely within the control of the executive and the legislature.” Id. (citations omitted).
Moreover, the court notes that the petitioner’s procedural due process argument that his mandatory detention has occurred without due process is bolstered by the fact that section 236(c) provides no hearing process or individual determination at all of the justifications — including flight risk and threat to the community — that this lawful permanent resident alien should be mandatorily detained, except for the requirement of a finding, as the respondents note, that the petitioner is, in the absence of section 212(c) relief, statutorily removable and that the petitioner comes within the scope of section 236(c). Section 236(c) therefore contains no provisions for a detention hearing, of the sort entailed under the Bail Reform Act, or discretionary individual determinations, as was the case with prior INA detention provisions.
See Salerno,
Under these circumstances, the factors in support of a detention or bond hearing outweigh the government’s weighty interest in the efficient administration of the immigration laws. Accordingly, the court concludes that the application to the petitioner of the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision without a bond hearing, while the petitioner’s section 212(c) request is pending, violates the petitioner’s right to procedural due process.
III. CONCLUSION
The Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus [Dkt. No. 1] is granted. The respondents or their designees shall afford the petitioner a detention or bond hearing before an Immigration Judge within seven (7) days of the date this Order is issued.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Section 1226(c)(1)(B) of Title 8 also mandates the detention of any alien who "is de-portable by reason of having committed any offense covered in” section 1227(a)(2)(B)(i), which provides:
Any alien who at any time after admission has been convicted of a violation of (or a conspiracy or attempt to violate) any law or regulation of a State, the United States, or a foreign country relating to a controlled substance (as defined in section 802 of Title 21), other than a single offense involving possession for one’s own use of 30 grams or less of marijuana, is deportable.
8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(B)(i).
. Moreover, although the court finds that the petitioner has an entitlement to a hearing on his INA § 212(c) request by virtue of his statutory eligibility for such relief, the court rejects the respondents’ straw man characterization of the liberty interest the petitioner
*312
asserts as that of entitlement to section 212(c) relief in the form of a waiver of deportation.
See
Gov't Brief at 10-11. It is true, as the respondents repeatedly cite in their brief, that the Supreme Court has described a waiver of deportation granted under section 212(c) as "an act of grace.”
INS v. Yang,
. The district court's holding in Avramenkov v. INS, 99 F.Supp.2d 210 (D.Conn.2000), rejecting an as-applied substantive due process challenge to the section 236(c) mandatory detention provision, does not inform the court's analysis of the instant petition, because the
