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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Nearly Half Immigration Judges Eligible to Retire

    Nearly Half Immigration Judges Eligible to Retire

    MIAMI December 22, 2013 (AP)

    By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ Associated Press Writer


    The nation's already backlogged immigration courts might soon be thrown into more havoc as roughly half of their 220 judges will be eligible for retirement next year.


    The Executive Office for Immigration Review, which oversees the nation's 59 immigration courts, says the court already has 32 vacancies, contributing to the current backlog of nearly 350,000 cases. Judges are overwhelmed, and immigrants with legitimate asylum claims can spend years in legal limbo.


    Meanwhile, immigrants without legitimate legal claims remain in the country, while Americans foot the bill for them to be locked up longer.


    The Executive Office says its average retirement rate is only 5 percent per year — which would mean 11 judges retiring in 2014. But Judge Dana Leigh Marks, president of the National Association of Immigration Judges, fears increasingly difficult conditions are likely to push many to retire at the earliest opportunity.


    "We are the forgotten stepchild. When Congress wants to fund immigration enforcement, they forget about the court," Marks said.


    She said it takes months to vet judicial appointees and even longer for judges to get up to speed.


    Congress has aggressively boosted funding for immigration enforcement and detention, with the Obama administration deporting some 360,000 people last year. Yet, the courts have seen few additional resources. That's even as caseloads have jumped 15 percent since 2011, according to Executive Office for Immigration Review Director Juan Osuna, who testified before a congressional subcommittee.


    As far back as 2008, a Georgetown Immigration Law Journal article surveying immigration judges found they exhibited more burnout "than prison wardens and physicians in busy hospitals." The judges blamed the stress on the pressure to adjudicate so many cases — and decide the fate of so many lives — in such little time.


    Unlike other federal judges, immigration judges fall under the U.S. Department of Justice and are employees of the executive branch, not the judicial branch. Their caseload varies. In Honolulu, two immigration judges currently each have about 100 cases, while six judges in Houston have about 6,000 cases each, according to the nonprofit federal data tracker,

    Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University.

    Immigration judges have no bailiff, no court reporter and aren't guaranteed a court clerk. And while a federal judge might lean on three law clerks to help with 400 or so complaints, three immigration judges generally split one law clerk for an average of 1,500 cases.

    Immigration judges also shoulder a much greater share of the legal research than other judges because 60 percent of those who come before their bench cannot afford an attorney.


    Brookings Institute Fellow Russell Wheeler said the delays create additional expense for taxpayers because individuals can spend more time behind bars waiting for their cases to be resolved at a cost of about $160 per night.


    Not everyone wants more judges, though. The lag time allows those without legitimate legal claims to remain in the country longer, and some immigrants hope if they can fight deportation long enough, Congress will eventually provide them some form of amnesty. Others marry a U.S. citizen while waiting for their cases to be heard.


    Miami immigration attorney Hector Diaz accompanied his client to immigration court this month in Miami. The client, who is in the country illegally, is fighting a deportation order he received after he was stopped for driving with an expired license.


    Diaz argues his client's removal would cause extreme hardship for the man's mother, a U.S. citizen, but Diaz acknowledges it's a tough case to win.


    "So it does benefit them to have the cases pushed back," he said.


    Judge Marks said while some benefit from the delays, it's often those with the strongest cases who lose out because memories fade and witnesses supporting their case become less reliable or available over time.


    The Senate passed immigration legislation in June that allocates more money for the immigration courts and called for 225 new judges, as well as an equal number of support staff, over the next three years. But House Speaker John Boehner has said his chamber will not take up that bill nor address a similar one introduced by House Democrats.


    The president's 2014 budget calls for 30 new immigration judge teams to address the backlog as well as other efforts to help the courts, but the stalemate in Congress makes it less likely the improvements will happen.


    Immigration attorney Ira Kurzban, author of the industry standard, "Kurzban' s Immigration Law Sourcebook," said while many in Congress complain about deportation proceedings, they have failed to provide the necessary resources for sufficient judges to allow the system to function properly.


    "Doing so would allow those people who should be here legally to get their legal status, and those who have no legal claim to be here would presumably be deported," he said.

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/h...etire-21302701

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    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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  2. #2
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Thousands of Cases Backlogged at Houston Immigration Court

    Monday, Dec 23, 2013 | Updated 11:49 AM CST
    nbcdfw.com

    Those awaiting hearings at a Houston immigration court should be prepared to wait for much more than a year due to thousands of pending cases, a shortage of judges and the more than two-week federal shutdown in October, a report has found.

    The Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a data gathering and research organization at Syracuse University, reported that the four judges assigned to Houston's downtown immigration court had 16,647 pending cases in November, up more than 250 percent since 2009. TRAC found that the wait for hearings reached an average of 555 days, up from 298 days four years ago, according to a report in The Houston Chronicle Monday.

    TRAC data shows there were more than 50,000 cases pending statewide last month. Houston's downtown court led the state with backlogged cases, followed by San Antonio with 12,400 cases and El Paso with 7,792.

    Gordon Quan, an immigration attorney, said clients are growing frustrated with the repeated delays, which often force them to reapply for work authorization and renew their fingerprint checks.

    "Some people want justice," he said. "They want their cases heard."

    Quan said he recently told a client who came to the U.S. without authorization 18 years ago that he would have to wait several years for his immigration case to come up in court.

    Officials with the Executive Office of Immigration Review, which administers the court system for DOJ, have acknowledged the need to hire more judges.

    In 2009, the agency had 237 judges and more than 223,000 pending cases, according to TRAC. Since then, the number of judges has grown to 252, while the number of cases on the docket has swollen to 350,000. The agency has 32 vacant immigration judge positions, said Kathryn Mattingly, an EOIR spokeswoman.

    "We are drowning," said Judge Dana Leigh Marks of San Francisco, president of the National Association of Immigration Judges. "The volume is just overwhelming and because of the responsibility that the judges have -- you have people's lives in your hands -- you have this tremendous pressure to do the right thing, with the same pressure to work as quickly as possible. And it becomes extremely grueling."

    http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Tho...237040281.html
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  3. #3
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    I'll work for half the pay if they make me an immigration judge.

    Just back the deport bus up to the back door of the court house and bring 'em on down.
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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