Marin Independent Journal

Three immigratio­n courts reopen despite rising coronaviru­s cases

- By Regina Garcia Cano and Julie Watson The Associated Press

BALTIMORE » Three immigratio­n courts reopened Monday as the government extended its push to fully restart the clogged system despite rising coronaviru­s cases in states where many of the small courtrooms are located.

In Baltimore, people with hearings to reach final decisions were allowed to enter the federal building housing the immigratio­n court only if they wore masks. Benches in a courtroom and seats in a waiting area were blocked off with tape, and social distancing signs were placed on the floor and elevators.

But scheduling hearings, which can include dozens of people in a single courtroom, did not take place Monday.

Courts in Newark and Detroit also were scheduled to reopen Monday. The reopenings extend a haphazard but unmistakab­le march to business as usual that has outraged judges and lawyers who say the pandemic poses unacceptab­le risk of spreading disease.

The Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigratio­n

Review started reopening courts over the past month to non-detained immigrants, first in Honolulu on June 15 and over the next three weeks in Boston; Buffalo, New York; Hartford, Connecticu­t; Las Vegas; New Orleans; Chicago; Cleveland; and Philadelph­ia.

Changes have been frequent and last minute.

Dallas reopened June 29 but, five days later, the agency announced on Twitter that it was closing until July 17 and gave no explanatio­n. Texas has been reporting a record number of coronaviru­s cases, and its governor has warned the state may have to return to a lockdown to get things under control.

San Diego, which also has seen a surge in coronaviru­s cases, was scheduled to reopen court on July 6 but moved it back two weeks — again without explanatio­n.

Hearings for non-detained immigrants were suspended in March because of the public health crisis, though courts in detention centers have continued to operate on a limited basis.

The court system’s backlog of 1.2 million cases becomes more crushing as long as courts are closed. The Justice Department said Monday that any court whose reopening date hasn’t been announced will be closed through July.

At Baltimore’s reopening Monday, security guards in the lobby of the federal building told people they could only enter without any accompanyi­ng relatives.

Among those told to wait outside was Wilfredo Vazquez, who traveled more than two hours from the West Virginia-Maryland border with his wife, who faces the risk of deportatio­n. They drove the approximat­ely 150 miles (240 kilometers) so she could try to file paperwork in her case after her scheduled check-in in June was canceled.

“We live very far away,” Vazquez said. “So much waste of time frustrates me.”

The Justice Department agency has given virtually no explanatio­n on what public health data it is using to determine if courtrooms are safe, said Ashley Tabbador, a Los Angeles-based immigratio­n judge speaking in her capacity as president of the National Associatio­n of Immigratio­n Judges union.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A security officer meets with people outside the federal building to give them a form to return for immigratio­n check-ins at a later date on Monday in Baltimore.
JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A security officer meets with people outside the federal building to give them a form to return for immigratio­n check-ins at a later date on Monday in Baltimore.

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