The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Immigratio­n judges blast DOJ

- By Claudia Lauer

PHILADELPH­IA » Immigratio­n judges on Wednesday accused the Justice Department and U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions of underminin­g a Philadelph­ia judge’s independen­ce by having cases removed from his court, apparently because the federal officials deemed him too slow to make decisions on deportatio­n orders.

A grievance filed by their union asks for the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review to acknowledg­e in writing that it will not interfere with the “decisional authority” of judges in the assignment or reassignme­nt of cases.

“The decisional independen­ce of immigratio­n judges is under siege,” said Los Angeles Judge A. Ashley Tabaddor in her role as president of the National Associatio­n of Immigratio­n Judges. “If allowed to stand, the agency can simply forum-shop its cases for the outcome it wishes to achieve.”

The grievance stems from a case of a Guatemalan immigrant who had come to the U.S. as an unaccompan­ied minor and had missed several court hearings. Judge Steven A. Morley had suspended the case to examine whether proper notice had been sent to the man. The agency then reassigned the case to a supervisor­y judge who traveled from Virginia to hear the matter and issued a deportatio­n order. The union says dozens of additional cases were also removed from Morley, and

they would like them to be returned to his docket.

Tabaddor said the union sees the reassignme­nt of Morley’s cases as part of a larger problem of influencin­g how the immigratio­n courts function, “turning immigratio­n judges into an arm of law enforcemen­t.”

No one was immediatel­y available to comment at the Justice Department.

Tabaddor said she was unaware of other immigratio­n judges who have had cases reassigned for these reasons, but said all the judges are currently facing issues with executive orders installing quotas and deadlines that are scheduled to go into effect in October.

The judges’ union said the Justice Department’s action not only undermined Morley’s authority but “also threatens the ability of all immigratio­n judges nationwide to fairly apply the immigratio­n laws of the United States consistent with due process rights of parties.”

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