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Rights of Noncitizens
Because DHS power and discretion are so great, noncitizens must know their rights. Noncitizens arrested by DHS have the right to speak to an attorney and, at least in some cases, the right to a hearing with an immigration judge before DHS can remove them. In addition, since the federal courts can rule that some or all parts of the expedited removal process are unconstitutional, and since the Attorney General may eventually include people in the United States in the expedited removal process, noncitizens should assert the right to a hearing with an immigration judge any time they are arrested by DHS. It does not matter if the noncitizens are documented or undocumented; they still have these rights. Noncitizens must assert these rights, or DHS may convince them to sign documents allowing DHS to "remove" them (formerly called "deporting") without seeing either an attorney or a judge.
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