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Thursday
Jan062005
Thursday, January 6, 2005 at 03:17PM
When a Mexican couple in Iowa got $1,000 in traffic tickets in one
weekend, Chariton lawyer Curt Daniels gathered his law books and sued
on their behalf. His claim: The couple were targeted because they are
undocumented immigrants, and the state should allow them to apply for
licenses to drive. "Their situation is just outrageous," he said.
"There are thousands and thousands of them in Iowa alone." The lawsuit
pits "Juan and Maria Sanchez" against the state of Iowa. The names are
pseudonyms for a Des Moines couple in their early 30s who have three
school-age children. They have jobs and have been in the country
illegally for five years, said Daniels, who refused to identify them.
The Iowa Supreme Court will hear arguments in the case Jan. 13. The
case has nudged Iowa toward a hot-button issue being argued in several
states and Washington, D.C., where Congress has debated whether to bar
states from granting licenses to undocumented immigrants. Eleven states
already do it, according to the National Immigration Law Center in Los
Angeles, but approval was granted by lawmakers. The Iowa case, say
legal authorities, would be the first in which authorities are forced
by court order to let undocumented immigrants test for licenses.
"Obviously, our position is that if the state wanted to pass a law it
could, but it's not compelled to do it," said Mark Hunacek, an
assistant Iowa attorney general who will argue the case. "It's being
discussed, and that's a healthy thing. It's one thing to try to
persuade a state to pass a law allowing the licenses, and it's another
to say that the state is obligated to allow it." [more] and [more]