U.S. courts abruptly tossed 9,000
deportation cases. Here's why
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[October 17, 2018]
By Reade Levinson and Kristina Cooke
(Reuters) - Liliana Barrios was working in
a California bakery in July and facing possible deportation when she got
a call from her immigration attorney with some good news.
The notice to appear in court that Barrios had received in her
deportation case hadn’t specified a time or date for her first hearing,
noting that they would be determined later. Her lawyer was calling to
say that the U.S. Supreme Court had just issued a ruling that might open
the door for her case, along with thousands of others, to be dismissed.
The Supreme Court case involved Wescley Fonseca Pereira, a Brazilian
immigrant who overstayed his visa and was put into deportation
proceedings in 2006. The initial paperwork he was sent did not state a
date and time of appearance, however, and Pereira said he did not
receive a subsequent notice telling him where and when to appear. When
he failed to show up in court, he was ordered deported.
The Supreme Court ruled that paperwork failing to designate a time and
place didn’t constitute a legal notice to appear in court.
The ruling sparked a frenzy of immigration court filings. Over ten weeks
this summer, a record 9,000 deportation cases, including Barrios’, were
terminated as immigration attorneys raced to court with challenges to
the paperwork their clients had received, a Reuters analysis of data
from the Executive Office for Immigration Review shows. The number
represents a 160 percent increase from the same time period a year
earlier and the highest number of terminations per month ever.
For a graph of the trend, click here: https://tmsnrt.rs/2QCbeJZ
Then, just as suddenly as they began, the wave of case terminations
stopped. On August 31, in a different case, the Board of Immigration
Appeals (BIA) ruled that charging documents issued without a date and
time were valid so long as the immigrant received a subsequent hearing
notice filling in the details, as is the usual procedure.
A Department of Justice official said that as a result of the BIA
decision, the issues “have been solved.”
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) did not respond to requests
for comment, but the agency laid out its thoughts on the terminations in
court documents opposing the motions to terminate. In a San Diego case,
DHS wrote that the motions were based on a “misreading” of the Supreme
Court decision. “If read in a manner most favorable to the respondent,
the practical impact would be to terminate virtually all immigration
proceedings.” The Supreme Court decision “nowhere purports to invalidate
the underlying removal proceedings,” DHS wrote.
The dueling interpretations will now be weighed by a federal appeals
court, which could uphold or overturn the BIA decision in coming months.
The case could ultimately end up before the Supreme Court.
"ONE GASP"
Having a removal case terminated, as Liliana Barrios and many others did
over the summer, does not confer legal status, but it does remove the
threat of imminent deportation and provide an immigrant time to pursue
legal ways of staying in the country, such as asylum or by accruing
enough time in the country to be eligible to stay through a process
known as cancellation of removal.
The Supreme Court ruling provided a “brief glimmer of hope”, said
immigration lawyer Aaron Chenault, “like when you are almost drowning
and you get one gasp.”
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Liliana Barrios poses for a photo at her place of employment in
Redwood City, California, U.S., October 10, 2018. REUTERS/Elijah
Nouvelage
The Department of Homeland Security can appeal the case dismissals
or it can restart deportation proceedings by issuing a new notice to
appear. By the end of August, the most recent date for which records
are available, government attorneys had appealed only 2,100 of the
cases terminated in the wake of the decision, according to a Reuters
analysis.
Roxie Rawls-de Santiago, an immigration attorney in New Mexico,
said that for some of her clients, even a few months of not being in
active deportation proceedings could make a difference. One woman
whose case was terminated, for example, has a U.S. citizen daughter
who turns 21 next year, the age at which she can sponsor her mother
for permanent residency, and the woman is now hopeful she can stave
off deportation proceedings until then.
CHAOS IN THE COURTS
At the Department of Justice, which administers the immigration
courts, chaos reigned in the weeks following the June decision.
Immigration judges and officials struggled to agree on an
interpretation of the Supreme Court ruling, according to internal
emails obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by
immigration attorney Matthew Hoppock and shared with Reuters.
“The issue has VERY large implications, in that DHS has put the
actual “time and date” on VERY, VERY few NTA’s, if any. Any guidance
would be helpful,” wrote Memphis immigration judge Richard Averwater
in an email to an assistant chief immigration judge days after the
ruling. Averwater declined to discuss the email further.
In San Francisco alone, immigration judges terminated 2,000 cases
between June 21 and August 31, sometimes more than 100 a day,
according to a Reuters analysis. In San Antonio, more than 1,200
cases were terminated.
“The court was getting dozens and dozens and dozens of those a
day,” said Ashley Tabaddor, president of the immigration judges’
union. “The large number of terminations that happened were directly
a result of Pereira.”
The door to mass dismissals for such cases could be reopened or
remain closed depending on how the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
rules on the Board of Immigration Appeals decision that stopped
them.
For Barrios, 20, who was caught crossing the Southern border
illegally with her toddler two years ago, her dismissal has meant
more time to file for a special visa for immigrants under the age of
21 who have been abandoned or neglected. Barrios said she was
abandoned by her mother.
Having her case terminated “lifted the pressure a bit,” said
Barrios, who makes cream for cookies at a wholesale bakery in
California during the day and studies English at night. The
Department of Homeland Security has appealed her case termination.
(Reporting by Kristina Cooke and Reade Levinson; Editing by Sue
Horton and Paul Thomasch)
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