International Students Can Stay In US After Federal Government Restores Visas

Two international students studying in West Virginia will be permitted to stay in the United States following new visa developments on the federal level.

Two international students attending West Virginia universities will be permitted to stay in the United States following visa concerns, the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia (ACLU) announced Friday.

In recent weeks, more than 1,200 international students across the United States had their visas revoked for appearing in criminal record checks, including at least 10 students in West Virginia. But an outpouring of lawsuits has led the federal government to reverse course.

Federal immigration officials announced Friday it will restore the visa status of students flagged in its record check, at least temporarily. ICE plans to revisit its review process and reconsider individual cases after an outpouring of similar lawsuits.

“ICE is developing a policy that will provide a framework for … record terminations,” government lawyers said in statements obtained by the Associated Press. “Until such a policy is issued…. plaintiffs in this case and other similarly situated plaintiffs will remain active, or shall be reactivated if not currently active.”

Two of the lawsuits came from the state’s ACLU chapter. The first was filed April 18 on behalf of a Marshall University graduate student whose visa had been revoked over a 2020 misdemeanor charge for driving under the influence of alcohol. A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order this week allowing the student to remain in the United States.

The second lawsuit was filed Thursday on behalf of Sajawal Ali Sohail, a computer science major at West Virginia University (WVU) from Pakistan.

Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia, that lawsuit challenged the grounds for revoking Sohail’s F-1 student visa, because he has never been convicted of a crime.

In 2023, Sohail’s family was scammed into paying a man who offered to front Sohail’s college tuition — unknowingly using stolen credit cards. He was initially charged for the scam, but the charges were later dropped when police determined Sohail to be a victim of the fraud, not its perpetrator, according to the ACLU.

In the lawsuit, the ACLU asks the northern U.S. district court to assume jurisdiction over the case and restore Sohail’s student visa status.

“We’ve heard time and again from the Trump administration that they only want to remove criminals from the country, but we know that simply isn’t the case,” said ACLU Executive Director Eli Baumwell in a Thursday press release. “It’s obvious the administration has embarked on a policy of mass terminations regardless of the facts.”

“This is positive news not just for our two clients in West Virginia, but for international students across the country,” the state’s ACLU chapter said in a subsequent press release Friday. “We are continuing to monitor the situation closely, particularly the announcement that ICE will be developing new policies for revoking legal statuses.”

Medically Assisted Death Is On W.Va.’s Ballot This November

On the ballot in November, West Virginia voters will decide whether or not to change the state’s constitution to prohibit medically assisted suicide.

Updated on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024 at 9:40 a.m.

This November, West Virginia voters will decide whether or not to change the state’s constitution to prohibit medically assisted suicide.

While West Virginia’s Amendment 1 lumps “the practice of medically assisted suicide, euthanasia, or mercy killing of a person” together, they are different practices.

Assisted dying can take two forms: euthanasia or assisted suicide.

Euthanasia requires a physician to take an action to cause a patient’s death, typically a form of lethal injection. Euthanasia is not legal in the U.S., with the exception of capital punishment in the 27 U.S. states that allow the death penalty.

For an assisted suicide, a physician will prescribe a lethal prescription for the patient to self-administer whenever and wherever they choose.

Assisted suicide is legal in ten states and the District of Columbia. Internationally, the practice is legal in several European countries, Canada, Columbia and parts of Australia.

Requirements differ, but generally, individuals must have a terminal illness as well as a prognosis of six months or less to live to be eligible.

A 2022 study found 74 percent of medically assisted deaths in the U.S. had a diagnosis of cancer and 87 percent were enrolled in hospice or palliative care.

Assisted suicide is already illegal in West Virginia, but Del. Pat McGeehan, R-Hancock, believes the prohibition of the practice should be enshrined in the constitution of the state.

“Medically assisted suicide and euthanasia against men and women is storming the Western world, all we have to do is take a look at northern Europe, Canada and the 10 other states where it’s already legal,” McGeehan said. “It’s growing at an exponential rate, and it’s really a horde nihilistic phenomenon that most people aren’t aware of yet, and that was one of the reasons, because we really need to secure our state against this going forward in the future.”

During the regular session of the legislature, McGeehan, a sponsor of the resolution that turned into Amendment 1, testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 4 that he was inspired to push for this constitutional prohibition after a constituent called and asked him to legalize medically assisted suicide in West Virginia.

McGeehan testified that he declined the request, but maintained correspondence with the constituent and tried to convince them not to travel to another state to carry out a medically assisted suicide.

Rusty Williams, the ACLU of West Virginia’s interim advocacy director, takes issue with McGeehan’s response to his constituent.

“The important part of the conversation is [that] our lawmakers are, they’re running counter to what we want,” Williams said.

The constituent eventually traveled to Oregon and passed away, spurring McGeehan into action.

Some lawmakers were concerned the resolution might prohibit capital punishment should it become legal in West Virginia. Therefore, the resolution was amended to include the caveat, “Nothing in this section prevents the State from providing capital punishment.”

When asked by lawmakers on the committee why he wanted to enshrine this prohibition into law, McGeehan said he and his fellow lawmakers will not always be in power, and he wants to prevent future lawmakers from legalizing the practice.

“The thought process is that we’re not always going to be here, and I don’t want to see in 10 years, suddenly this culture invade West Virginia like it has some of our border states already,” McGeehan testified.

On July 26, the ACLU of West Virginia published its opposition to Amendment 1, calling it unnecessary. Williams finds the proposed amendment deeply concerning.

“Our constitution exists to protect and expand rights, and I find it incredibly concerning that this is to take away a future right,” Williams said. “Medical aid in dying is already illegal in West Virginia. There’s already a statutory prohibition here. So enshrining it into the constitution, to me, runs counter to why the constitution exists in the first place.”

Williams said popular opinion in West Virginia might change, as it has nationally. A 2018 Gallop poll found that 72 percent of Americans support allowing terminally ill people to seek medical assistance in ending their own lives.

“A no vote doesn’t make any immediate changes to the lives of patients,” Williams said. “They’re still not going to be able to access this right because of the statutory prohibition. A yes vote just means that we are going to make it harder for legislatures down the road to again, if the will of the people changes.”

On Sept. 16, the League of Women Voters of West Virginia released a statement urging voters to reject Amendment 1.

“West Virginia already has laws on the books having to do with this,” said Judy Ball, chair of the League’s Legislative Action Workgroup. “This is not something new. That’s one of the problems with this amendment is it deals with issues that we already have dealt with in statute, and then it’s written in extremely vague terms, possibly to confuse the voter.”

Ball also said the league opposes Amendment 1 as it relates to capital punishment.

“The other thing is this amendment includes this reference to the death penalty, another thing that’s already in West Virginia law,” Ball said. “It was prohibited by West Virginia law going back to 1965, the league also opposes the death penalty. Why that’s in here? I have no idea, but it suggests that, to me, it suggests that what’s written into this amendment isn’t really what it’s about.”

Ball said she believes Amendment 1 is about control and an attempt by the government to intervene in decisions that should be personal.

“The legislature wants the government to control your life, to practice medicine without a license, and to intervene in places they don’t belong,” Ball said.

McGeehan believes that medically assisted suicide creates a setting where pressure is placed upon the elderly and disabled to see themselves as a burden.

“We want to send a signal to the rest of the country that we’re not going to stand for this nihilism and this dystopian nightmare that’s rapidly spreading across our country to save health care costs by killing the elderly, and we want to ensure that it never gains a foothold here in our state in the future, we want to send a signal that this should be the gold standard,” McGeehan said.

Election Day is November 5th.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Editor’s Note: This story was updated to include the source for McGeehan’s statement about saving health care costs.

ACLU Launches Online Tool To Report Religious Teaching In Public Schools

On Friday, the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia launched an online tool for residents to report religious content being taught in public schools.

A new law that took effect in June could expand how West Virginia teachers respond to questions on the origin of life.

But the state’s American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) chapter worries this could encroach upon students’ religious freedoms. With a new school year beginning for most West Virginia students this month, the organization has launched a new online tool for students, parents and guardians to report religious content being taught in public school classrooms.

Earlier this year, the West Virginia Legislature passed Senate Bill 280, which states that school and government officials cannot prohibit teachers “from responding to student inquiries or answering questions from students about scientific theories of how the universe and/ or life came to exist.”

An earlier draft of the bill explicitly sought to give teachers permission to “teach intelligent design as a theory.” Intelligent design theory states that life was created by a higher power, which overlaps with Christian belief in the existence of God.

But in a Friday press release, the ACLU of West Virginia said the initial draft of the bill was in conflict with a 2005 ruling from Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, which found that intelligent design was not rooted in science. The ruling declared the theory could not be taught in public school classrooms because it therefore violated students’ constitutional right to religious freedom.

Any reference to intelligence design was struck from the bill’s final version. But the ACLU said this makes the purpose behind the new law, as well as its potential applications, hazy.

“It’s entirely unclear what exactly the final version of this bill seeks to permit, because it was already lawful for teachers to answer questions about scientific theories,” ACLU Legal Director Aubrey Sparks said in the press release. “What is clear, however, is the constitutional right to freedom of religion. The state may not push specific religious viewpoints onto students, period.”

Sparks said that the ACLU worries teachers might think the law grants them freedom to portray their religious views as science during class. This concern led the ACLU to launch the new online tool, where residents can report their concerns to the organization’s legal team.

The legal team will monitor the situation and review all submissions as the school year continues, Sparks said.

To access the new online tool, visit the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia website.

W.Va. Reporter Arrested at Capitol Attempting to Question Trump Officials

A West Virginia reporter was arrested at the state Capitol Tuesday before a meeting held by U.S. Health and Human Services Sec. Tom Price.

Dan Heyman of the Public News Service was charged with a misdemeanor offense of willfully disrupting a governmental process.

According to a complaint filed in Kanawha County magistrate court, police say Heyman approached Price and Counsel to the President Kellyanne Conway as they entered the Capitol Tuesday afternoon, asking them questions. The complaint accuses Heyman of “aggressively breaching” the secret service escorting the two when he was detained by Capitol police.

The West Virginia ACLU held a press conference defending the reporter Tuesday night, saying the arrest sets a dangerous precedent and violates the first amendment of the Constitution.

Heyman could face a fine of up to $100 and 6 months in jail.

Heyman is a former employee of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

ACLU, Residents Criticize New City Drug Ordinance

The West Virginia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and city residents have expressed concern over a new Weirton ordinance that creates a criminal charge for those under the influence of drugs in public.

The Intelligencer reports the city council passed the law through an emergency reading in March. The ACLU chapter sent a letter April 6 and residents approached the council Monday.

Residents cited mental health concerns, vague language and inadequate law enforcement training and treatment provisions.

City Attorney Vince Gurrera is reviewing the letter and offered to speak with residents. He says the law was developed because of increased incidents. West Virginia has been hit hard by the opioid crisis.

Those convicted face up to $500 in fines and 30 days in jail.

Supreme Court Rejects Lawsuit Over Online Voter Registration

The West Virginia Supreme Court has rejected a lawsuit filed against the county clerks of Kanawha and Cabell counties over their refusal to accept online voter registrations from the Secretary of State’s office.

Cabell County Clerk Karen Cole tells The Herald-Dispatch that she received an official statement Tuesday afternoon from the court saying the petition filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia had been rejected.

The lawsuit had been filed earlier that same day against Cole and Kanawha County Clerk Vera McCormick, who have been mailing papers out to online registrants to complete before they would accept the registration.

Cole and McCormick said they were uncomfortable with the security provisions in West Virginia’s voter registration website.

The deadline for voter registration was April 19.

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