Gov’t Won’t Appeal Freedom For Pizza Deliveryman Arrested At Army Base

Luciana Villavicencio age 4, holds up a photo of her family on a cellphone during a press conference on June 18, 2018 regarding her father Pablo Villavicencio. - Ecuadorean Pablo Villavicencio was detained by Immigra... Luciana Villavicencio age 4, holds up a photo of her family on a cellphone during a press conference on June 18, 2018 regarding her father Pablo Villavicencio. - Ecuadorean Pablo Villavicencio was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement(ICE) after delivering a pizza to Fort Hamilton Army base in Brooklyn, and was detained despite being in the process of adjusting his immigration status. His wife and two daughters are all US citizens. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images) MORE LESS

NEW YORK (AP) — An Ecuadorian pizza deliveryman freed from an immigration detention facility by a judge who criticized the handling of the case will remain free after the government declined Friday to pursue an appeal.

Attorneys notified the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan that the government won’t challenge a judge’s July decision freeing Pablo Villavicencio.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, said in a statement that he wasn’t surprised.

“The federal government is admitting what we already knew — there was absolutely no legitimate reason to lock Mr. Villavicencio up and take him away from his family,” Cuomo said.

Villavicencio, 35, was detained June 1 in New Jersey after delivering pizza to the Fort Hamilton Army base in Brooklyn. The detention came as Villavicencio was in the process of seeking to establish legal residency and overcome a 2010 order to leave the country. He is married to a U.S. citizen. Their two young daughters also are U.S. citizens.

Cuomo said his arrest “while he was doing his job was an outrageous affront to our New York values and raised serious concerns of ethnic profiling.”

When he ordered the release of Villavicencio over the summer, U.S. District Judge Paul Crotty said he didn’t believe the detention was “accidental or random.”

“It should not be difficult to discern that families should be kept together rather than be separated by the thoughtless and cruel application of a so called ‘zero tolerance’ policy,” Crotty wrote.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions ordered the policy in April.

Nicholas Biase, a spokesman for government attorneys, said a notice of appeal that had been filed while the government decided whether to pursue an appeal was withdrawn Friday.

In a statement, The Legal Aid Society, which represented Villavicencio, said it was pleased that the government “fully withdrew their challenge to Mr. Villavicencio’s hard-won release from immigration detention and his opportunity to pursue lawful status.”

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  1. Avatar for jmacaz jmacaz says:

    OK… we KNOW the AP is bad … BUT … Governor Cuomo, Brooklyn, sheesh

    Villavicencio, 35, was detained June 1 in New Jersey after delivering pizza to the Fort Hamilton Army base in Brooklyn.

    Talk about lack of proof reading… or maybe that this lends credence to the rumor that the AP only hires deplorables now

  2. What am I missing here? They arrested him in NY and jailed him in NJ. Feds can do it AFAIK.

  3. Avatar for noonm noonm says:

    Arrest happened in NY and then he was jailed in NJ.

    The bigger scandal is that there are immigrant prisons in NJ. Gov Murphy should do all in his power to make those prisons feel unwelcome in the state.

  4. Glad to hear, the young man remains free!

  5. Avatar for jmacaz jmacaz says:

    It is infinitely clearer the way you wrote it.

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