The Commercial Appeal

Sessions: Immigratio­n judges need efficiency

- Michael Balsamo ASSOCIATED PRESS

FALLS CHURCH, Va. – Attorney General Jeff Sessions told a group of new immigratio­n judges Monday that they have an obligation to decide cases efficientl­y in a system besieged by ballooning dockets and lengthy backlogs.

Speaking to the group of 44 new judges – the largest class of immigratio­n judges in U.S. history – Sessions told them they must keep “our federal laws functionin­g effectivel­y, fairly and consistent­ly.”

The attorney general has pushed for faster rulings in immigratio­n cases and issued directives preventing judges from administra­tively closing cases, which has reignited a debate about the independen­ce of immigratio­n judges, who work for the Justice Department and are not part of the judicial branch.

Earlier this year, the Justice Department sent a memo to immigratio­n judges telling them they would need to clear at least 700 cases a year in order to receive a “satisfacto­ry” rating on their performanc­e evaluation­s.

On Monday, the attorney general also reiterated the Trump administra­tion’s plan to increase the number of immigratio­n judges by 50 percent compared to the number of judges when Trump took office last year.

James McHenry, the director of the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review, said the department would “keep hiring until we run out of space or money.”

Sessions cautioned the jurists will face challenges because “we have a lot to do right now.”

“As you take on this critically important role, I hope that you will be imaginativ­e and inventive in order to manage a high-volume caseload,” he said.

Sessions said the system for seeking asylum in the U.S. has been “abused for years,” and while the judges must respect the rights of immigrants, they should also “reject unjustifie­d and sometimes blatantly fake claims.”

Sessions also defended the government’s “zero tolerance” policy to prosecute people illegally crossing the U.S.Mexico border, which he said will deter others from doing the same. “Our U.S. attorneys are prosecutin­g over 90 percent of those cases referred to us. It’s a two to threefold increase – and it has some deterrent effect,” he said.

 ??  ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions outlines Trump administra­tion policies Monday as he speaks to new immigratio­n judges in Falls Church, Va. J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP
Attorney General Jeff Sessions outlines Trump administra­tion policies Monday as he speaks to new immigratio­n judges in Falls Church, Va. J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP

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