Imperial Valley Press

US adds prosecutor­s, judges for immigratio­n cases on border

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PHOENIX (AP) — More prosecutor­s and judges will be assigned to help whittle away at a backlog of immigratio­n cases along the U.S.-Mexico border, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement that 35 new assistant U.S. attorney jobs have been created to help speed prosecutio­n of illegal border crossings and immigrant smuggling in the four states bordering Mexico.

The department says the new positions in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas are part of the zero-tolerance policy Sessions earlier announced to deal with a new surge in apprehensi­ons along the border.

To deal with the existing backlog of cases, 18 supervisin­g immigratio­n judges are being assigned to hear cases in immigratio­n courts near the border, both in person and through video teleconfer­encing.

James McHenry, director of the Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review, says the move represents a roughly 50 percent increase in the current number of immigratio­n judges hearing cases.

McHenry’s office mobilized over 100 immigratio­n judges to Department of Homeland Security detention facilities across the country between March and September 2017, including along the southwest border.

The office in October estimated that the mobilized immigratio­n judges had helped complete about 2,700 additional cases.

“By deploying these additional resources to the Southwest border, the Justice Department and the Trump Administra­tion take yet another step in protecting our nation, its borders, and its citizens,” Sessions said.

Session’s get-tough attitude on immigratio­n has been translated in federal court into the expansion of a decade-old program called Operation Streamline, which sees immigrants accused of entering the U.S. illegally generally complete what was once a months-long prosecutio­n in a single day.

Critics of the program say it violates due process and does not deter repeat offenses.

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