Michelle Karshan and staff and participants of Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ in Haiti
 
ALTERNATIVE CHANCE/CHANS ALTENATIV
A self-help, advocacy program for criminal deportees in Haiti
 
 
March 28, 2008 Alternative Chance/Michelle Karshan response to 2007 US State Dept Report issued March 11, 2008
challenges assertions made regarding treatment of Criminal Deportees arriving in Haiti
 
 
Articles about Criminal Deportation to Haiti, Alternative Chance, and Criminal Deportation in general
Articles on Alternative Chance, Criminal Deportees, Criminal Deportation and Haiti
 
 
CONTACT US
Mailing, telephone, email, fax -- contact information
 
 
ATTENTION ATTORNEYS
For attorneys fighting criminal deportation from the United States
 
 
HOW YOU CAN HELP!
Donate money or materials, Volunteer in Haiti or the US.
 
 
Press Releases and Alerts
Alternative Chance Press Releases and Alerts on Haiti and Criminal Deportees/Deportation
 
 
Very Brief Overview of Haitian Government Response to Criminal Deportation to Haiti
Criminal Deportation to Haiti and Haitian government response
 
 
June 2006 Note on Our Work
Overview of Chans Altenativ work and thinking
 
 
Preliminary Report by Michelle Karshan on Police Executions & Torture of Criminal Deportees in Haiti 2004-2006
Criminal Deportees are often targeted for execution solely because of tatoos, the way they wear their clothes, gold teeth, and different behavoir and walk
 
 
Brief Overview of Haiti's Recent History
Haiti history for context
 
 
WHERE AM I? A Guide to Adjusting to Haiti Against Your Will (Excerpt)
This manual provides new criminal deportees in Haiti with an orientation on numerous subjects
 
 
Criminal Deportees in Haiti Receive No Food or Water in Jail
Criminal Deportees receive no food or water when imprisoned upon arriving in Haiti
 
 
Photos & Photo Credits
Photos of Alternative Chance and life in Haiti for criminal deportees
 
 
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Our Outcast Youth
Short documentary by David Belle about Alternative Chance as told by three young men
 
 
LINKS
Resources: Our partners and other valuable resources
 
 
Links to Job Training, Job Readiness, and More
Job training, Job readiness, Job resources
 
 
Alternative Chance Haitian Art Gallery
Help support our work by visiting our Haitian Art Gallery
 
 
Are You a United States Citizen?
Comprehensive breakdown by the Florence Project on what makes someone a US citizen
 
 
Women Criminal Deportees in Haiti
International Women's Day and Women Criminal Deportees in Haiti
 
 
May 21, 2007 Advisory on the Continued Detention of Criminal Deportees Arriving in Haiti
Michelle Karshan documents Haiti's continued detention of Haiti's Criminal Deportees
 
 
New life is no life for U.S. ex-cons in Haiti
Chicago Tribune article about criminal deportees in Haiti
 
 
Haitian government announces it will imprison all Criminal Deportees arriving in Haiti
Metropolehaiti, August 16, 2006, Haitian government announces it will put arriving Criminal Deportees in prison
 
 
Overview of Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ Past and Future Activities for Criminal Deportees in Haiti & those Challenging Criminal Deportation to Haiti, October 15, 2007
Priority Issues, Upcoming Family Camp, Collaborations, Human Rights Awards, Annual Benefit
 
 
Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ 2nd Annual Awards & Fundraising Dinner
Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ to hold annual dinner at Tap Tap Haitian Restaurant in South Beach November 8, 2007
 
 
Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ Family Camp
First camp uniting children with their deported parent in Haiti for structured retreat
 
 
Donation/Reservation form
Fill in form to make donation, donate frequent flyer miles, or make reservations for annual dinner
 
 
Cases of Respondents Who Fear Imprisonment as Criminal Deportees to Haiti:
Haitian CAT cases since J-E
 
 

Very Brief Overview of Haitian Government Response to Criminal Deportation to Haiti

Deported to Haiti on a commercial flight with US Marshals by Nope

Deported to Haiti on a commercial flight with US Marshal escorts by Nope

Criminal Deportation to Haiti under the Various Governments of Haiti

Criminal Deportation to Haiti under the Various Governments of Haiti. Since the early 1980s the United States was deporting non-citizens to their home countries if a judge ordered deportation based on the severity of one’s conviction. This was reserved for the most serious of cases.

Haiti received its repatriated citizens and processed them quickly through their police and immigration offices letting them free within a day or so.

Immediately following President Preval’s inauguration in 1996 the U.S. instituted its 1996 Anti-Terrorist Act which mandated forced deportation for all non-citizens who were convicted of a crime that was perceived by the INS as an aggravated felony – even if the state statute under which the person was convicted did not categorize the crime as such.

Further, this new law stripped judges of judicial discretion. Although later challenged, the INS originally interpreted this new law as giving them the authority to deport people for retroactive convictions that may even have been from 20 years earlier.

This interpretation and the subsequent wide scale search for such persons led to a dramatic increase in deportations and Haiti, which had just recently returned to democratic order after a three year coup period and had only recently graduated its first civilian police force, was ill prepared to receive this new influx of Criminal Deportees.

Many countries, particularly in the Caribbean region, demanded certain standards from the US regarding the deportation process such as advance notice of deportation, etc. (and are still engaged in discussions with the US).

Haiti, as many other countries had done, set about to negotiate these terms with the US as well and refused to receive new criminal deportees until the conclusion of the negotiations.

By time the Haitian government and the US had reached a conclusion to their talks, a backlog of persons had accumulated.

Citing security concerns, President Preval’s government first ordered 38 Criminal Deportees to be held in Haiti’s National Penitentiary where they remained for a few months. The government later ordered the remaining backlog of 500+ Criminal Deportees, and subsequent Criminal Deportees arriving in Haiti, to be held in police station holding cells throughout Haiti for an indefinite period of time and later set up a Commission, based in the Ministry of Interior, to oversee who would be released and when. Note: Prisoners in police station holding cells do not receive food and must depend on family members to bring food for them daily. Many Criminal Deportees in Haiti do not have any families there. There is also no medical at police stations.

Also citing security concerns, when President Aristide returned to office in 2001 his government changed the procedure to direct all newly arriving Criminal Deportees to be held for an indefinite period of time at Haiti’s National Penitentiary and the Commission continued to be in force. Note: Haiti's national prison does provide a limited amount of food daily and has an infirmary.

Again citing security concerns, the Interim Haiti Government in place from early 2004 until May 2006, continued the practice of detaining Criminal Deportees in the National Penitentiary, but the US for the most part accommodated the Interim Haitian Government’s request to suspend Criminal Deportation to Haiti. Halfway through its administration, the Interim Haitian Government moved the jurisdiction over Criminal Deportees to its Secretary of State for Public Security, which is a sub-post to the Minister of Justice.

August 16, 2006, the Minister of Interior announces that the official Haitian government policy is to detain all Criminal Deportees in the National Penitentiary upon their arrival in Haiti.

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