Imperial Valley Press

Immigratio­n judges to be sent to border detention centers

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SAN DIEGO (AP) — The Justice Department said Friday that it will temporaril­y transfer immigratio­n judges to six detention centers mostly near the border with Mexico in an effort to put President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n directives into effect.

The department’s Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review said the transfers to four locations in Texas and one each in Louisiana and New Mexico will occur Monday.

Judges were previously moved to two immigratio­n detention centers in California.

Trump’s executive order on border and immigratio­n enforcemen­t in January says judges should immediatel­y be assigned to immigratio­n detention centers.

Many courts are for immigrants who are freed before their cases are heard.

The clogged immigratio­n courts have gotten less attention than other aspects of Trump’s orders, such as constructi­on of a wall on the 2,000-mile border with Mexico and the addition of 5,000 Border Patrol agents and 10,000 Immigratio­n and Customs and Enforcemen­t officers and agents.

There was a backlog of 542,646 cases at the end of January, including 20,856 people who were being held in custody.

Jeremy McKinney, a Greensboro, North Carolina, attorney and board member of the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n, said transfers to detention centers means longer waits for people who aren’t being held.

“Now we’re starting to see cases postponed out into 2021,” he said. “Those families continue to live in legal limbo.”

The president’s budget proposal for the 2018 fiscal year released Thursday calls for a 19-percent increase in immigratio­n judges to 449 positions.

There are currently about 300 judges, even though the office is funded for 374 slots.

Kathryn Mattingly, a spokeswoma­n for the Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review, said 50 applicants are in various stages of the hiring process, which can take up to 12 months.

Dana Marks, president of the National Associatio­n of Immigratio­n Judges, said hiring is “exceedingl­y slow and cumbersome.”

Marks, also a judge in San Francisco, said the temporary assignment­s are expensive and will cause delays elsewhere.

“There’s always going to be some dockets that are going to suffer when a judge is taken from one location,” she said.

Starting Monday, a detention center in Jena, Louisiana, will have three judges, Mattingly said.

Detention centers in Dilley, Karnes City, Laredo and Livingston — all in Texas — and in Chaparral, New Mexico, will each have one.

They currently have none, though hearings can be done by video connection with other courts.

Judges were previously transferre­d to detention centers in San Diego and Adelanto in California.

“The detained cases are our priority,” Mattingly said. “They have always been a priority but they are our highest priority right now.”

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