Pubdate: Fri, 15 Jan 2010 Source: New York Times (NY) Page: A22 Copyright: 2010 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Kirk Semple Cited: The New Sanctuary Coalition of New York City http://www.newsanctuarynyc.org/ Cited: Families for Freedom http://www.newsanctuarynyc.org/ Cited: Immigration and Customs Enforcement http://www.ice.gov/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Immigration+and+Customs+Enforcement DEMONSTRATORS PRESS FOR HAITIAN ADVOCATE'S RELEASE Against the backdrop of the earthquake in Haiti, dozens of protesters gathered outside a Greenwich Village detention center on Thursday to demand the release of Jean Montrevil, a Haitian immigrant rights advocate and a community leader in New York who has been detained since December while awaiting deportation. The rally came a week after two other demonstrations for Mr. Montrevil led to the arrests of 19 people, many of them clergy members, who blocked traffic in an effort to step up their pressure on federal authorities and draw more attention to their cause. Organizers said the protests appeared to be the first time in recent years that local immigration demonstrators had turned to civil disobedience. On Thursday, however, the organizers said they toned down their protest out of respect for the suffering in Haiti and throughout the Haitian diaspora, and temporarily suspended their civil disobedience. "We plan on using that tactic as we move forward," said Angad Bhalla of the New Sanctuary Coalition of New York City, one of the groups that organized the protests outside the Varick Federal Detention Facility. "But today didn't seem to be the right day to do it." The protesters have cast Mr. Montrevil, 41, as a symbol of the flaws in the immigration system and of the need for comprehensive reform. Mr. Montrevil entered the country in 1986 as a legal permanent resident. He was convicted of selling cocaine in 1990, at the age of 21. After 11 years in prison, he was released. Mr. Montrevil started a van service, married an American woman and became a respected member of the Haitian community in New York, his supporters say. He is the father of four children. But under immigration laws enacted in 1996, all noncitizens convicted of felonies are subject to deportation. And on Dec. 30, 2009, during Mr. Montrevil's regular weekly check-in with immigration officials as part of a supervised release program for deportable immigrants, he was detained. His lawyer, Joshua E. Bardavid, said the authorities had given no explanation about why they were detaining his client after so many years. Mr. Montrevil is now in a detention center in York County, Pa. On Wednesday, after the earthquake struck, federal authorities temporarily suspended deportations to Haiti. Mr. Bardavid said he believed that case law dictated that Mr. Montrevil be released until deportations were resumed, and vowed to sue the government if necessary. On Thursday, protesters argued that immigration laws did not make allowances for Mr. Montrevil's rehabilitation and contributions to the community. "Why are we sentencing his kids to not having a father?" Mr. Bhalla said, as about 70 demonstrators gathered at the Varick Street detention center. (They chose the jail as a symbol of the detention system, but later Thursday, federal immigration officials announced that they would close the center, in part because it lacked access to open-air recreation.) Some protesters carried signs that said, "Bring Jean Home," and sang spirituals. Among the group was Mr. Montrevil's wife, Jani, who said she had spoken to her husband almost daily since he was detained last month. They last spoke on Wednesday evening, she said, and news of the earthquake left him shocked and relieved. Mrs. Montrevil said that her husband was supposed to have been deported within a few days of his detention in December. Had he been sent to Haiti, she said, "he could've been dead." Mrs. Montrevil added, "I could've been a widow today." Protest organizers said they would engage in acts of civil disobedience in future protests. "It attests to a scale-up in the intensity of the movement," said Janis Rosheuvel, director of Families for Freedom, a New York-based organization that lobbies on behalf of people facing deportation. The strategy fits in with a shift in tactics among advocates across the country who are pushing for a comprehensive immigration overhaul. A group of immigrant students are on a four-month-long trek from Miami to Washington to press the Obama administration to move faster on immigration changes. Other activists have used tactics like a hunger strike and a mass conference call in which 60,000 people heard a proposal to overhaul immigration by Representative Luis V. Gutierrez, Democrat of Illinois. Mr. Gutierrez introduced an immigration bill in the House last month. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake