Now
that that the Obama Administration’s attempt to allow millions of deportable
illegal aliens to remain in the United States through the issuance of an
unlawful executive order, has been thwarted by the US Supreme Court, they are
taking a different approach to establishing their unlawful amnesty for illegal
aliens.
Faced
with large backlogs of removal cases, many immigration judges are now just
closing deportation proceedings and letting illegals stay in the country rather
than actually trying to remove them, simply because it’s easier; this despite
the fact that most are clearly deportable under US immigration laws. As noted
in the following Fox News story, this
“pass the buck mentality” appears to be something that has permeated the
Executive Office of Immigration Review which oversees Immigration Judges, and
is a sentiment that the Obama Administration apparently actively supports and
encourages. I consider them "The Enemy
Within."
Ben
Ferro, Editor (InsideINS.com)
Judges
nixed DHS bids to deport illegal immigrants 100,000 times: report
by Malia Zimmerman, Fox News U.S.
Immigration
judges around the country are denying the Department of Homeland Security’s
attempts to deport illegal immigrants in record numbers, according to a new
report.
Over the
last 10 months, immigration judges opted against the department’s efforts to
remove some 96,223 illegal immigrants, including criminals, according to the
Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a Syracuse University-based
nonprofit.
At this
rate, TRAC estimates the number of illegal
immigrants allowed to remain in the U.S. despite DHS attempts to remove
them will surpass last year’s breaking number of 106,676. With the court’s
protection, subjects can often remain indefinitely.
“It’s
concerning to me that the immigration courts are becoming such a frequently
used back-door route to green cards,” said Jessica Vaughan, director of Policy
Studies for the Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington, DC-based research
institute, noting these cases will be nearly 10 percent of the green cards
approved in 2016.
“Many of
them arrived illegally, and are being awarded legal status simply because they
managed to stay a long time and have acquired family members here.”
One in
four of the illegal immigrants allowed to stay in the country despite DHS
efforts to remove them this year is from Mexico , TRAC reported.
Another 44
percent were from the three Central American countries — El Salvador , Guatemala , and Honduras — where vast numbers of
unaccompanied minors and women with children have crossed the border to seek
asylum.
There are
a number of reasons why an individual may be allowed to remain in the country,
according to TRAC .
“… the
judge can find that the government did not meet its burden to show the
individual was deportable,” the report stated. “Or, the judge may have found
that the individual was entitled to asylum in this country, or may grant relief
from removal under other provisions of the law.
“A person
also may be allowed to remain because the government requests that the case be
administratively closed through the exercise of ICE's prosecutorial discretion,
or for some other reason,” the report also stated.
The Phoenix federal Immigration Court had the highest percentage of
non-citizens allowed to stay in the country over the objections of DHS
officials.
“In more
than four out of every five, or 82.2 percent of its 3,554 cases closed so far
in 2016, the individuals were successful in their quest to remain in the U.S,” TRAC reported.
The New York Immigration Court was not far behind at 81.5 percent
of the 16,152 non-citizen cases closed to date, followed by the Denver Immigration Court at 78.0 percent of its 831 cases.
Nationwide,
there is a backlog of around 500,000 cases pending in the immigration courts,
and as it grows, judges become more lenient, said Ira Mehlman, spokesman for
the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR).
“This is
by design,” Mehlman said. “The longer the attorneys draw out the cases, the
better it is for their clients because the likelihood that they will get to
stay in the country increases. It is also better for the immigration attorneys
because they can charge more fees.
“From the
judge’s perspective, because the courts are so backlogged, it is easier to let
people stay in the country than actually try to remove them,” he said. “There
are endless layers of appeal and no finality in it.”
On the
opposite end of the scale, Oakdale , La. , Lumpkin , Ga. and Napanoch , N.Y. , Immigration Courts only allowed
between 11.3 percent and 17.5 percent of the non-citizens slated for removal to
remain in the U.S. , TRAC reported.
There is a
great deal of money spent, and government resources dedicated, to prosecute a
removal case for detention, to monitor those who are released, for attorneys to
prosecute removal cases and for the court personnel to conduct hearings, said
Claude Arnold, a retired U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement special agent
in charge of Homeland Security Investigations.
The
administration of the immigration courts does not comment on third-party
analysis of data, said Kathryn Mattingly, spokesperson for the Department of
Justice’s Executive Office for Immigration Review. However, she said the year
prior to the TRAC report, in Fiscal Year (FY) 2015, immigration judges granted 48
percent of asylum applications, marking the third year in a row that percentage
has decreased, falling from 56 percent in 2012.
for Immigration Review. However, she said the year
prior to the
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