Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Attorney general’s latest decree revs up Trump’s ‘deportatio­n machine’

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Quietly, the Trump administra­tion recently launched its latest attack on the nation’s independen­t judiciary system.

It came via an order by the Justice Department to revive immigratio­n cases that were shelved indefinite­ly under a practice known as administra­tive closure. Attorney General Jeff Sessions ruled that federal immigratio­n judges did not have the authority to close cases through that method, the latest in a number of steps by the administra­tion to curtail judges’ ability to stand in the way of its disgracefu­l deportatio­n practices.

By eliminatin­g administra­tive closure, the administra­tion has taken away a tool that for years has helped courts deal with a crushing backlog of cases and has given judges discretion to resolve cases in a fair, due process-based manner.

It’s used in situations in which there’s a good chance an immigrant can obtain documented status, but federal officials need more time to investigat­e the legitimacy of an asylum claim, a proposed marriage to a U.S. citizen, etc. Judges can simply park cases temporaril­y, delaying deportatio­n proceeding­s while vetting is carried out.

Administra­tive closures are effective in many cases, so much so that prosecutor­s often request them. They work for both the courts and the defendants, helping keep the caseload moving and providing a way for immigrants to remain in the U.S. while obtaining their documentat­ion.

Or, rather, they used to. Then came Sessions’ order, which could put some 355,000 cases back on court dockets. That not only puts immigrants at risk of being deported before their immigratio­n status is cemented, but it threatens to add to the glut of unresolved cases — about 730,000 — and dials up the pressure on judges to clear out the backlog via deportatio­n orders.

“Sessions is using his authority as attorney general to turn the immigratio­n courts into a deportatio­n assembly line, with (Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t) officers waiting at the exits with open handcuffs in hand,” said David Leopold, who oversees the immigratio­n law group at Ulmer & Berne, to The New York Times.

For the record, the Justice Department has proposed addressing the backlog through such means as increased use of teleconfer­encing to allow judges to handle cases remotely, creating a new electronic filing system and streamlini­ng the hiring process for judges.

But much of that plan will take time to implement, and meanwhile Sessions’ order could swamp the courts with reopened cases.

With less discretion and more cases to move, judges will have little choice but to issue more deportatio­n orders. What’s worse, Sessions’ order comes less than six months after the administra­tion establishe­d a quota for judges to resolve immigratio­n cases. Under the quota, judges are evaluated based on how many cases they close and how fast they move cases through the system, meaning justices are incentiviz­ed to issue deportatio­n orders as opposed to finding a pragmatic, fair and compassion­ate way to resolve them.

“Make no mistake, the outcome this administra­tion truly desires from mandating quotas on an understaff­ed adjudicato­ry agency with a needlessly overstuffe­d docket is to transform it into a deportatio­n machine,” Jeremy McKinney, a North Carolina immigratio­n attorney and secretary of the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n, said in a media conference after the quota order.

All the while, the Trump administra­tion has been inundating the court by ending a previous practice of only targeting the most dangerous cases for prosecutio­n.

To her credit, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., has been watching the situation closely, and last week joined several Senate Democrats in raising a red flag about Sessions’ order on administra­tive closure. The group sent a letter to Sessions and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen requesting details about how the order would be carried out and saying the order would “undeniably overwhelm” the system. The senators went on to urge the administra­tion to adopt recommenda­tions that were made by an independen­t evaluator for the Justice Department to handle the backlog, none of which included eliminatin­g administra­tive closure.

Beyond the implicatio­ns for immigrants, judges and the courts, though, the order has broader implicatio­ns. It’s an assault on the independen­ce of the American judiciary, a fundamenta­l need for any legal system and for our democracy.

Constraini­ng judges’ discretion and taking away their authority is the stuff of dictators, not American presidents. Surely, even immigratio­n hawks can understand the dangers that are inherent in moves like this.

The courts don’t belong to President Donald Trump. And as Cortez Masto showed, Nevada isn’t going to stand by and watch him hijack them.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions waves to guests after giving a speech on efforts to combat violent crime Sept. 13 in Kansas City, Mo.
CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Attorney General Jeff Sessions waves to guests after giving a speech on efforts to combat violent crime Sept. 13 in Kansas City, Mo.

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