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View Full Version : Despite Huge Backlogs, The Government Shutdown Halts Most Immigration Court Hearings




Zippyjuan
01-03-2019, 06:48 PM
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/02/681712888/despite-huge-backlogs-the-government-shutdown-halts-most-immigration-court-heari

e-Verify also shut down- employers not able to determine immigrant status of job applicants. Some required to do so by law. Both slow deportations.


The federal government shutdown — caused in part by disagreements over immigration policy — is delaying immigration court hearings across the country.

Court appointments scheduled during the shutdown will be "reset" to new dates in the future, per a notice from the Department of Justice dated Dec. 26. The only exception are courts operating in immigration detention centers, where federal immigration authorities hold immigrants pending deportation. However, court staff may not be paid while continuing to hear those cases.

In addition, some emergency motions in nondetained cases can still be filed to the judges that are working during the shutdown.

Shutting down the country's massive system of immigration courts will gum up an already congested judicial process, immigration judges and attorneys say.

In federal immigration court, judges often hear cases in quick succession, a process some have compared to hearing "death penalty cases heard in traffic court settings." A swift deportation may become a death sentence if a person is forced to return to a violent homeland.

Each day of the shutdown means thousands of cases will be pushed back indefinitely, according to Ashley Tabaddor, president of the National Association of Immigration Judges. Tabaddor said she currently has around 2,000 cases before her court in Los Angeles, while some judges have upwards of 4,000.

"We don't have time to adequately consider the cases that we do have, much less have to spend extra time to think about what we're going to do with all the cases that have to be rescheduled," she said.

Calls to the U.S. Department of Justice asking for more information about the rescheduling went unreturned, and emails to department press officers returned auto replies saying they were furloughed.

In recent years, the backlog of immigration court cases in the U.S. has swelled, as processing times lagged. The average case making its way through immigration courts today has been there for 718 days, or almost two years, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University, which compiles statistics on U.S. immigration. That's up from 430 days a decade ago.

Some administration officials and immigration hard-liners have criticized long processing times as contributing to practices that allow immigrants without strong cases to stay in the U.S. for years, rather than be swiftly deported.

To try to move cases through more quickly, the Trump administration imposed quotas on immigration judges in 2018, requiring them to clear 700 cases a year or get docked points on their performance evaluations. However, under former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the Department of Justice also changed policy so that more than 300,000 closed immigration cases could be reactivated. If reopened, those claims would swell the backlog of cases from upwards of an estimated 768,000 cases to more than 1 million.

Both policies drew criticism from judges such as Tabaddor, who called the quotas "indefensible" and a sign that immigration court should be made independent of the executive branch.

"It's quite ironic to shut down the immigration courts because of the differences on immigration," she said, referring to President Trump's desire for funding additional barriers at U.S.-Mexico border.

more at link.

Zippyjuan
01-04-2019, 04:37 PM
People requesting asylum will now be able to stay in the country for years more while their cases make their way though the court system (once it gets started up again). Winning!

Swordsmyth
01-04-2019, 04:58 PM
People requesting asylum will now be able to stay in the country for years more while their cases make their way though the court system (once it gets started up again). Winning!
Any delay is necessary to stop the ongoing invasion that is already overwhelming the system, whether or not a wall is the best idea we must make drastic changes and increase border security and the Demoncrats won't do anything voluntarily.

AdamL
01-04-2019, 05:00 PM
Why are immigration court hearings even a thing? Asylum needs to be abolished. These people should all be immediately deported as soon as they cross the border, no exceptions.

oyarde
01-04-2019, 06:23 PM
Remind me again why we are giving out asylum to people like candy ?

Dr.3D
01-04-2019, 06:32 PM
Remind me again why we are giving out asylum to people like candy ?
Because we like having people enter our country illegally.

It's like spreading sugar on the ground and not expecting flies.

Swordsmyth
01-04-2019, 07:03 PM
Remind me again why we are giving out asylum to people like candy ?
Because we supposedly owe it to the whole world and the needs of our own people make no difference.:rolleyes: