http://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Judge-won-t-toss-Neb-driver-s-license-lawsuit-5171386.php
Judge won't toss Neb. driver's license lawsuit
Updated 11:38 am, Friday, January 24, 2014
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A judge has refused to dismiss a lawsuit over Nebraska's denial of driver's licenses to immigrants who came into the country illegally as children with their families.
District Judge Jeffre
Cheuvront on Wednesday rejected the state's request,
the Lincoln
Journal Star (http://bit.ly/M33rnn
) reported.
In August 2012,
Republican Gov. Dave
Heineman declared that Nebraska would deny driver's
licenses to the immigrants who became eligible to avoid
deportation and work in the U.S. as a result of the Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Several
months later he said Nebraska would vigorously defend its
policy, even if the state were sued.
The American
Civil Liberties Union had filed the lawsuit in June
on behalf of four Omaha residents. The lawsuit says
Nebraska officials violated state law that requires state
agencies to go through a public hearing and comment period
before making significant changes to state rules and
regulations. The lawsuit says the policy also violates the
state constitution's right to due process.
Cheuvront said in
Wednesday's ruling that "while it is true that there is no
constitutional right to a driver's license, it is equally
true that such a license cannot be denied based on an
unlawful classification."
In reaction to the
ruling, ACLU attorney Christine
Sun said the organization is "confident that the
court will conclude that the government's classification
is unlawful as this case proceeds."
A spokeswoman for the
Nebraska attorney general's office didn't immediately
return messages Friday from The
Associated Press. The office is representing the
state in the driver's license matter.
The ACLU lawsuit, filed
in Lancaster County District Court, was the second one
prompted by the state's refusal to issue the licenses. The
Mexican American Legal
Defense and Educational Fund sued the state in
federal court on behalf of a Nebraska City woman, saying
Nebraska's policy violates her constitutional right to
equal protection and is unconstitutional because it's
trumped by federal law.
Applicants for the
deferment program must have come to the U.S. before they
turned 16, be younger than 30, have been in the country
for at least five continuous years, be in school or have
graduated from high school or GED program or have served
in the military. They also were allowed to apply for a
two-year renewable work permit.
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