In 1980, 10,000 Cubans took refuge on the grounds of the
Peruvian Embassy in
Havana in the hope of being granted asylum and allowed to emigrate. For several months the
Cuban government allowed those wishing to emigrate to depart via the Port of
Mariel. Some of those permitted to leave had recently been released from prisons and mental institutions. In response, the United States enacted the Refugee Education Assistance Act (8. U.S.C. § 1522), which provided funds for both the resettlement of Cuban immigrants and the incarceration and deportation of those deemed ineligible for refugee status.
U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese, with the approval of President
Ronald Reagan, proposed splitting the recent arrivals into two classes: one containing those previously convicted of crimes in Cuba, and another for those Cubans with no criminal records. Both classes were held at the
Federal Penitentiary in
Atlanta, Georgia. Two of the refugees, Moises Garcia-Mir and Rafael Fernandez-Roque, were detained upon their arrival in
Florida as possible security threats and held in Atlanta to await possible deportation. They filed suit in the
District Court for Northern Georgia, asserting violations of both the
due process clause of the
Fifth and
Fourteenth Amendments. The District Court agreed with their claims. On November 25, 1985, it ordered Meese to submit a plan to hold a parole hearing for each of the plaintiffs within thirty days and to hold such hearings within sixty days. A parole hearing, sometimes called a detention hearing, would determine whether the person is entitled to release from federal custody or properly held in anticipation of his return to Cuba. The
U.S. Justice Department appealed to the Eleventh Circuit, making an emergency motion to suspend the District Courts orders. ==Initial review==