Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Grievance filed over removal of judge by Justice Dept.

- By Jeff Gammage

The National Associatio­n of Immigratio­n Judges has filed a formal grievance over the Justice Department’s removal and replacemen­t of a Philadelph­ia jurist who had delayed the deportatio­n of a Guatemalan immigrant.

The removal of Judge Steven Morley subverted the judicial process, undermined his independen­ce, and impugned his competence and integrity, all to obtain a particular outcome in the case, according to the judges’ union and its labor complaint.

“This is a direct interferen­ce with a judge’s decisional independen­ce,” said Ashley Tabaddor, president of the National Associatio­n of Immigratio­n Judges and a sitting immigratio­n judge in Los Angeles.

The case involved a man named Reynaldo Castro-Tum, who came to the United States four years ago as an unaccompan­ied 17-year-old. After Judge Morley sought to ensure that Mr. Castro-Tum had been properly notified that he was to appear in court, a replacemen­t judge was sent to Philadelph­ia to take over the case. She ordered Mr. Castro-Tum deported without further inquiry.

The Justice Department declined to respond on the record to questions about the grievance.

In a conference call with reporters Wednesday, Ms. Tabaddor revealed that the Justice Department had removed roughly 60 additional cases from Judge Morley’s calendar. She described the judge, who did not respond to an earlier request for comment, as “enraged” and “disturbed” by his removal but still coming to court and on the job.

Ms. Tabaddor described the

removal of a sitting judge from an active case as unpreceden­ted, calling it part of “a step-by-step encroachme­nt” into judicial authority by a Justice Department led by Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Immigratio­n court is a civil system, composed of roughly 60 jurisdicti­ons and 350 judges. In the flow chart of the federal government, these courts come under the Justice Department, not the judiciary. At the top of the department stands the attorney general, who has the power to issue binding decisions on how immigratio­n judges operate.

Those circumstan­ces make the courts vulnerable to political pressure, outside observers say, and judges have come under increased Justice Department regulation since President Donald Trump was elected.

In April, judges were told they each must clear at least 700 cases a year and have less than 15 percent of their decisions overturned to receive a satisfacto­ry rating on their job reviews.

That has led immigratio­n attorneys to worry: Will judges feel they must rush through some cases so they can achieve their quota?

In June, Mr. Sessions reversed a ruling that granted asylum to a Salvadoran woman who said she was physically and emotionall­y abused by her ex-husband. The attorney general told immigratio­n judges that domestic abuse and gang violence were no longer sufficient grounds.

The labor complaint was filed in keeping with the collective-bargaining agreement between the judges associatio­n and the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review. Judge Morley and the associatio­n are listed as grievants.

The Justice Department violated the authority of an immigratio­n judge to make an independen­t decision and to grant a continuanc­e for good cause — along with the due process clause of the U.S. Constituti­on, the complaint said.

News broke last week that the Justice Department had replaced Judge Morley after he had asked for more legal informatio­n in a deportatio­n case, inserting a new jurist who quickly ordered the defendant removed from the country. Fifteen retired judges signed a letter of protest, calling Judge Morley’s ouster the latest attack on judicial independen­ce.

Initially, Mr. CastroTum had been released into the care of a relative in Washington, Pa. He subsequent­ly failed to appear for at least two court hearings.

On May 31, seeing that the man had no lawyer, Philadelph­ia immigratio­n attorney Matthew Archambeau­lt stepped forward as “a friend of the court” to provide representa­tion. He asked for a continuanc­e to try to locate Mr. CastroTum, the complaint said.

Mr. Archambeau­lt said the case was likely headed toward a ruling of deportatio­n, but at the same time it was unclear if Mr. CastroTum had received the notices telling him to come to court. Knowing that answer was vital to determinin­g whether Mr. CastroTum could be ordered to be removed in his absence, the complaint said.

On July 19, Assistant Chief Immigratio­n Judge JackWeil told Judge Morley that the case had been reassigned because the Philadelph­ia judge should not have continued the case at the request of a friend of the court and should have proceeded with an order of removal — as per Mr. Sessions’ earlier decision restrictin­g judges’ use of what is called administra­tive closure.

The Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review sent Assistant Chief Immigratio­n Judge Deepali Nadkarni to Philadelph­ia to conduct a single hearing. She ordered the defendant removed without further inquiry.

Among other remedies, the judges’ associatio­n wants a written acknowledg­ment that no cases will be assigned or reassigned in a way that interferes with a judge’s authority to make decisions.

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