President Joe Biden has proposed a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million immigrants lacking documents in the United States. Opponents claim that this important humanitarian step would reward lawlessness and serve as an incentive for a new round of undocumented immigration. As a former federal prosecutor and the head of an organization dedicated to accountability for human rights violations, I find these fears unfounded. A program of broad legalization would be in keeping with the long-established concept of a statute of limitations in criminal law.
A statute of limitations precludes criminal prosecution after a set period of time. Other than for the most serious federal crimes, U.S. law puts that limit at five years. That limit reflects the practical difficulties of collecting evidence and mounting a defense years after an alleged offense has occurred. It also reflects that it would be unfair to disrupt people's lives long after they've allegedly committed an offense. The government is expected to address crimes within a reasonable time or to let things lie. No one seriously claims that this endpoint for criminal liability encourages more crimes.
Most deportations of immigrants involve civil rather than criminal proceedings, but similar equitable considerations come into play. Indeed, most civil claims in the U.S. also face a statute of limitations. Although proof of an immigrant's undocumented status is usually straightforward, the human consequences of deportation after the passage of years can be enormous.
The American public recognizes these humanitarian concerns in its broad, bipartisan support for legalizing the status of 700,000 "Dreamers" — those brought to the U.S. as children who have essentially grown up as Americans. To deport them would be to send them to a foreign country that they barely know, if at all.
Humanitarian concerns arise as well for others who have been in the U.S. for years. The Pew Research Center's analysis of government data shows that two-thirds of the adults among those who are in the U.S. without authorization have been here for a decade or more.
The center of these people's lives has shifted to the U.S., as the Migration Policy Institute's profile of the population shows. They have 4 million U.S.-born children, meaning that if they were deported their American children would either be separated from a parent or forced to grow up outside the United States. One and a half million are married to U.S. citizens, who in the case of deportation would have to live apart from their spouses or move abroad so they could stay together.
Even leaving aside the impact on family members, these immigrants are important members of our communities. More than 3 million own their homes. They represent 5% of the U.S. workforce. In short, a large number of them have become Americans in all but the papers they carry.
Yes, the U.S. has an interest in protecting its borders and enforcing its immigration laws, but at some point that interest should give way to the considerable humanitarian interest in not destroying the American lives that immigrants have built.