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Government
We need an independent immigration court system - More lawyers, bigger government
2018-10-01
[The Hill] More than 200 years ago, the framers of the Constitution distributed federal power among three branches of government to ensure that no single branch was unchecked. Today, we are seeing that principle eroded as Attorney General Jeff Sessions wields his considerable authority over the immigration courts to advance a transparently anti-immigrant agenda. In the process, he is bending the system to its breaking point.

Many Americans are not aware that our nation’s immigration courts, unlike other courts, are a part of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) ‐ the very same law-enforcement agency that is charged with prosecuting immigration cases in federal courts.

Just as it would be unacceptable for a district attorney to supervise trial judges, it should be unacceptable for the Attorney General to control the jurisprudence, docket management, and even the terms of employment of immigration judges. This has long been recognized as a fundamental structural flaw in our immigration court system, but Congress has so far failed to rectify the situation and create a new system that is truly independent.

This flaw in our judicial system has made it vulnerable to the extreme policies of the Attorney General. One such policy goes into effect today, Oct. 1‐the imposition of numerical quotas to measure the performance of immigration judges. These quotas will require judges to adjudicate a minimum of 700 cases each year or possibly face disciplinary action. The National Association of Immigration Judges (NAIJ) opposes the move, calling it a "death knell for judicial independence." The judges argue that quotas will compromise the integrity of the court, undermine due process, and add to the court’s backlog, which now exceeds 700,000 cases. In other words, the quotas are unethical, unfair, and inefficient.

The quotas are just one of many policies DOJ has implemented in rapid succession over the past year. In several precedent-setting decisions, the Attorney General has restricted asylum law so as to deny protection to nearly all survivors of domestic violence or gang-related persecution, and stripped immigration judges of nearly all power to terminate, administratively close, or continue cases. Across the board, these and other DOJ policies under the Attorney General’s leadership have emphasized speed and quantity rather than well-reasoned decisions.
Posted by:Besoeker

#14  I do love the symmetry of duplicating the Mexican laws and waiting for people to complain.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2018-10-01 22:22  

#13  Just mirror Mexico's immigration policies, and empower local and state law enforcement to enforce the law.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2018-10-01 19:29  

#12  What we need is more available doctors and nurses to type them and test them for diseases before they are broken up for the organ banks. No sense in wasting them.
Posted by: Silentbrick   2018-10-01 17:45  

#11  Do things really improve with more attorneys gumming up a system? Seems like they are the ones causing many of our immigration problems.
Posted by: JohnQC   2018-10-01 17:29  

#10  I'd limit immigration to those earning more than average wages (and sponsor pays taxes if migrant does not leave on time).
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2018-10-01 16:55  

#9  We're being flooded with troll messages.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2018-10-01 15:45  

#8  Immigrants should require a sponser the way they have in Australia. You can't find work the sponser has to pay your way and keep you off the dole.

Combine that with hammering anyone that employs illegals, and immediately rejecting asylum seekers that come from non-border nations as the law details and the problem will go away.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2018-10-01 11:35  

#7  There is no right of aliens to be here. We need a controlled immigration system based on a merit system and assimilation. Build the wall and be done with it. Thought the wall was approved during the Reagan admin. and never fully completed?
Posted by: JohnQC   2018-10-01 11:34  

#6  Why should the work be centralized?
Push it out to each US Embassy.
Posted by: Skidmark   2018-10-01 09:49  

#5  The 'worst kept secret' should be dealt with as well:

USA Today - Mollie Tibbetts murder case exposes farms' worst-kept secret: hiring undocumented immigrants
Posted by: Besoeker   2018-10-01 08:35  

#4  The first thing we need to do is start treating Illegal Aliens as a 'border security' problem and not an 'immigration' problem - meaning no right to the immigration court or proceeding (because they are not immigrants!).

Do that and the need for immigration courts drops a lot.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2018-10-01 08:22  

#3  #2 boiled it down to the essence.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-10-01 07:56  

#2  Have you entered the country in accordance with the law? Yes or No. We're done here.
Posted by: P2kontheroad   2018-10-01 07:47  

#1  How many companies in the US could I just walk into, take over an empty desk and begin demanding a paycheck and benefits? OK, I'm sure it could be done, but not on the scale illegal immigrants are entering the US.

We don't need more bureaucracy, we need a simple, consistent non-subjective system where people apply to enter and present resume-like documentation that they will not be non-contributing dependents. Keep the naturalization timeframe the same but stretch right-to-vote out to 25 years with an exemption for anyone who has paid federal taxes for 10 consecutive years.

No more anchor babies either.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-10-01 07:44  

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