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Immigration Courtrooms Silent During ICE Review


First Posted: 01/17/2012 9:12 am Updated: 01/17/2012 9:58 am

Associated Press, By P. Solomon Banda

DENVER -- In a trial of a politically divisive program, U.S. prosecutors in Denver and Baltimore are reviewing thousands of deportation cases to determine which undocumented immigrants might stay in the country – perhaps indefinitely – so officials can reduce an overwhelming backlog by focusing mainly on detainees with criminal backgrounds or who are deemed threats to national security.

Federal deportation hearings for non-criminal defendants released from custody were suspended Dec. 5 for the review and resume this week. Similar reviews are planned across the country to allow U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to target deportations of undocumented immigrants with criminal records or those who have been deported previously.

While the immigration courtrooms in Denver have fallen silent, prosecutors had time to examine case files, check residency history – such as whether someone was brought to the country as a child – as well as criminal history.

In Denver, 25 ICE prosecutors and three managers spent their work days during most of December and early this month poring over as many files in their case load as possible, ICE spokeswoman Barbara Gonzalez said.

"They come in on weekends," Gonzalez said. "They're looking at every case."

Officials have not released information on how many cases will be placed on low priority based on the review. When they're finished, cases of those here illegally but deemed not a threat to public safety or national security will be placed on administrative hold and the numbers will be released.

Citing tight budgets, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced this summer that nearly 300,000 deportation cases would be reviewed to determine which could be closed through "prosecutorial discretion." Republicans have decried the policy as a back-door way of granting amnesty to people who are living in the U.S. illegally.

"We simply cannot adjudicate all these cases that are pending," said spokeswoman Gonzalez. Some cases in Denver date to 1996, she said.

"It's a holiday for anybody in the country illegally," said Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Washington-based Federation for American Immigration Reform, which opposes the initiative. "They're doing this with the intention of dismissing as many of them as they possibly can."

Several attempts at immigration reform have failed in recent years, including the so-called DREAM Act, which would have allowed some young undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children to earn legal status if they went to college or joined the military.

In June, ICE director John Morton announced that prosecutors and immigration agents would consider a defendant's length of time in the country, ties to the community, lack of criminal history and opportunity to qualify for some form of legal status in deciding whether to press for deportation.

Denver has about 7,800 deportation cases pending, while Baltimore has about 5,000. Hearings and deportations involving criminal immigrants continued in both Baltimore and Denver. The suspended hearings dealt only with non-criminal defendants.

Before expanding the program, officials will examine the effect of the review on caseloads. They are also seeking to balance hearing high priority cases with those in which a person might have a strong case but has waited years for a hearing because of the backlog, said former Immigration and Naturalization Service commissioner Dorris Meissner.

Those who offered prosecutorial discretion don't have to accept, and can insist on having their case heard by a judge.

"Everybody thinks that people just want to have their case dismissed," said Meissner. "If they accept prosecutorial discretion, it's true they don't go before a judge and they don't get deported, but their case is in limbo."

For some, word that their cases have been postponed brings relief – but not closure. They're still in the country illegally.

Jesus Gerardo Noriega, 21, of Aurora, Colo., said he learned in December his case was being closed.

"I'm happy that I don't have to show up in court every six months so they don't deport me," Noriega said. But, he added: "I'm in limbo. I can't do anything."

Noriega's family brought him to the United States from Mexico when he was 9. His parents and three brothers live here legally, and he graduated from high school – but only applied for a work visa last year. He faced deportation after being arrested in April 2010 for driving with no license plate light.

Deportation cases have risen sharply since 2007, when Homeland Security began using fingerprints collected from those held in local jails to identify and deport criminals and repeat immigration violators. Those cases increased from about 174,000 in 2007 to about 298,000 in 2011, according to figures compiled by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a research group affiliated with Syracuse University.

Immigrant advocates have blasted the fingerprint program, called Secure Communities, for subjecting people to deportation after minor traffic infractions or misdemeanors. Some state laws require police to notify ICE of suspected undocumented immigrants.

But advocates say they welcome the federal review as a way to deal with a sluggish immigration court system where cases can linger for years.

"The courts are a mess," said Susan Barciela, Miami-based policy director for Americans for Immigration Justice. "The volume keeps getting bigger and people's rights are being violated."

During the pilot program, Denver and Baltimore immigration judges were assigned to hear detainee cases elsewhere.

"The immigration courts are empty," said Denver immigration attorney Hans Meyer of the scene in December and early this month. "It's a pretty busy place, so it's kind of strange."

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Associated Press, By P. Solomon Banda DENVER -- In a trial of a politically divisive program, U.S. prosecutors in Denver and Baltimore are reviewing thousands of deportation cases to determine whic...
Associated Press, By P. Solomon Banda DENVER -- In a trial of a politically divisive program, U.S. prosecutors in Denver and Baltimore are reviewing thousands of deportation cases to determine whic...
Associated Press, By P. Solomon Banda DENVER -- In a trial of a politically divisive program, U.S. prosecutors in Denver and Baltimore are reviewing thousands of deportation cases to determine whic...
Associated Press, By P. Solomon Banda DENVER -- In a trial of a politically divisive program, U.S. prosecutors in Denver and Baltimore are reviewing thousands of deportation cases to determine whic...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elecktra001
PC assassin
10:50 PM on 01/19/2012
Get back to work, no exceptions.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
02:49 PM on 01/18/2012
Lets save the costs of deporting 7.5 million of the 11.2 million illegals whom are Mexican Nationals

Give them what they want U.S. Citizenship ~ via making Mexico the USA's 51st State
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
12:58 AM on 01/18/2012
That's the ignorance of the government, "he was pulled over for no license plate light?". How much does that cost everyone (anyone who buys anything) probable millions of dollars. Why don't they do like on TV, send a note to them and let em know they won a free boat, then just arrest them.
THE FACT That Immigrants are being treated un-fair is correct. There is got to be a better way.
It don't matter who you are, It's like the state police picking you up and dropping you off in another state. Remember, with no resources to provide for yourself. For the grace of god go I.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
11:20 AM on 01/18/2012
Since Aurora, CO does not grant valid / legal Driver's Licenses to illegals ~ the no license plate light is a mute point

Driving without a Colorado Driver's License is considered a threat to public safety ~ its just so common place in the everyday life of illegals

Jesus Gerardo Noriega, 21, of Aurora, Colo, could have driven 250 miles south on I-25 into the State of New Mexico, or 250 miles west on I-70 into Utah and obtained a valid / legal NM or UT Driver's License ~ two of three States which have issued over 500,000 valid Driver's Licenses to illegals since 2001

Driving w/o a valid driver's licenses IS A MISDEMEANOR ~ but, a "Deportable" Misdemeanor to an illegal, unauthorized to be in the USA
06:31 PM on 01/18/2012
Driving w/o a valid driver's licenses IS A MISDEMEANO­R ~ but, a "Deportabl­e" Misdemeano­r to an illegal, unauthoriz­ed to be in the USA
===================
Not in Los Angeles, they get a free pass, it is shameful!
01:17 PM on 01/18/2012
David: Do you break into other people’s homes, often?? He was in the country illegally and probably without a license and insurance. His parents stole well over $100k in educational costs from the US taxpayers.

As far as dropping you off in another state. Try Mexico’s method.

You sound so wise in the ways of the world. Have you tried being in some other countries illegally, like this guy? Spend some time in a Mexican jail after they sentenced you to 2 years in jail for being in their country illegally? How about a protest in Mexico? Earn a quick ticket to jail even if you are in their country legally. You complain about the laws in the US, but they are some of the most lenient in the world. .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
03:27 PM on 01/18/2012
Man, I totally agree, I work all over these streets in Austin. It's like reverse discimination.
Teacher tell me he needs $12,000.oo for dental work and this huge dental van pulls up in front of the school and most of the children get free dental care. Now, explain how you can teach with your mouth all messed up. Oh, the hypocrisy. its chicken and egg all over.
Go to England, and see how long they will let you stay, before they show you das boot.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
10:46 PM on 01/17/2012
Our immigration system is so broken it isn't even funny. What is being decided here - seats on a bus headed to the border? We have to give priority to the violent criminals and let other illegals (still criminals, obviously) stay because we don't have the resources to deport them? Why can't we lease more busses - run them 24/7 - how hard can it be? It isn't like there needs to be individual trials - have mass trials at night in say a football stadium. 75000 at a time. Judfge asks, over a loudspeaker: Are any of you here legaly? A few people raise their hands and come to the front. They show papers (Birth Certificate, passport, greencard, etc.). The rest are found guilty of trespass into the US illegaly, file outside, board busses or trains, and go to the border. Done. We need serious immigration reform if this is not the quick, easy way of getting rid of these illegal aliens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cat-Lover
Cats=Independence
09:23 PM on 01/17/2012
Do what is right andf proper,
but Quiero mi Taco Bell.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nasknit
Freedom isn't free.
08:04 PM on 01/17/2012
Can WE volunteer to "help" read those files?
03:16 PM on 01/17/2012
you dont have to be illegal to be held in immigration jail, $750K in tax dollars wasted on you and then deported, destroying your life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
markspence
04:30 PM on 01/17/2012
Interesting. Do you have a story to tell along those lines?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cat-Lover
Cats=Independence
09:22 PM on 01/17/2012
Yeah: That teenage American chich deported two weeks ago to Columbia.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
01:06 AM on 01/18/2012
I don't know davey, Those "Do I LOOK ILLEGAL" T-Shirts are going fast on the net.
Blacks have been profiled for years, now the (brown skinned ones). Tell em you were born this way.
Don't wait for them to start profiling little white boys. This getstapo has to stop, plus we can't afford it....Pretty soon everybody gets IOU's
03:07 PM on 01/17/2012
Ummm...toughen policies...then incarcerate them. so that they can be pardoned and nationalized? must be an election year.
12:54 PM on 01/17/2012
This Noriega guy under current law is a ghost. Why we have people that still think this system is NOT broken ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
12:18 PM on 01/17/2012
"Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Washington-based Federation for American Immigration Reform, which opposes the initiative."

AP is so concerned with the appearance of "balance" that they solicited the opinion of a hate group. Awesome.
12:52 PM on 01/17/2012
FAIR is the voice of calm and reason compared to LaRaza, MEChA, Lulac, etc.
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looneydoone
not a "cookie"
10:14 AM on 01/18/2012
FAIR ius just one organzanization founded by Optometrist John Tanton in the 1980's. The stated mission is to prevent the loss of a *white xtian* majority population in the USA
CIS
NumbersUSA are two more of his groups. They are listed as "worrisome" by the SLPC because of the large number of neo nazi's, white supremacists, and nativists that are attracted to the message.

Read what Jim Gilchrist, President the Minuteman Project (a large border vigilante group) has to say. The anti-immigrant movement has been "trampled and shouted down by the ultra right" and those with "sinister racist agendas". Quite an admission from him ! www.SDReader.com ( letters 29 Sept 2011 "Trampled By Bullies" )
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Phil Hill 2012
01:45 PM on 01/17/2012
Any group that opposes the initiative is a hate group? Only in your warped mind.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
01:35 PM on 01/18/2012
No, this particular organization is a hate group.
11:33 AM on 01/17/2012
It is time that the Mexican government provide jobs, safety and services for its people. For too long they exported their people rather than provide government services.
11:57 AM on 01/17/2012
One explanation of many is that they exported themselves because cheap US food/corn after NAFTA destroyed the small scale agri jobs that kept a lot of people tied to Mexico.
01:05 PM on 01/17/2012
You have a point. The Mex small farms were ate alive (just like ours) from the big Agri business with US Federal money from congress. They are subsidized on our tax dollars and this is basically socialist and monopoly, right ?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlairCase
01:53 PM on 01/17/2012
In 2010, the U.S. imported $229.7 billion worth of goods from Mexico while exporting only $163.3 billion worth of goods to Mexico. In other words Mexico came out $66.4 ahead in the NAFTA exchange. The U.S. is runing a trade deficit with Mexico.
12:58 PM on 01/17/2012
They are, I think. We are at the lowest point (immigration) in many years. What is probable a cause to have an upcoming increased demand for cheap labor than is vanishing. Where are the pool of workers CA always relied upon ? Are the good folks from severely affected states coming to sunny CA to work the fields and other back breaking jobs ? It's kind of expansive to live here. Are they willing to live behind family, friends and most roots ? Time will tell, I guess.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
11:42 AM on 01/18/2012
Unlike the 30-acre Alabama farmer relying on illegals to harvest their crops ~ being a Federal Felony to employ illegals

California farmers of 1000 acre plus farms rely on mechanical harvesters to bring their crops to market legally w/o the exploitation of illegals' cheap labor

Take a look how real farmers farm in California

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvWZIj-XCjM

How many illegals can you count picking tomatoes?
11:32 AM on 01/17/2012
If every employer in the country was required to use E-Verify before hiring someone the employment draw would be reduced. Reducing the draw of a job would reduce the number of illegals in the country.

We already have more people looking for jobs than we have jobs available.
12:59 PM on 01/17/2012
Sorry, that's an illusion. We will have this coming harvest way more work than hands. Where is the line of people flocking to CA ?
01:37 PM on 01/17/2012
Advertise for workers and pick them up with a bus at a large parking lot like Home Depot or WalMart. You will get more people than you think. People want jobs.
No unemployed person with kids to feed is refusing work. You might need to change the way you look for workers and the wages and benefits you provide. The workers are there. You will need to make an effort to get them.
11:23 AM on 01/17/2012
why some get to stay? if they are illegals they should be deported no if no buts no ands.
01:03 PM on 01/17/2012
Oh yeah, black and white, easy solution, right ? WRONG, it's just doesn't work like that.
03:58 PM on 01/17/2012
Do you have ANY idea the resources and infrastructure that would be required to deport that many people?
04:49 PM on 01/17/2012
If they come from North or South America, give them an extra pair of shoes and start 'em marching. Come from across the pond and you get two inner tubes and a cooler. Good luck and good day.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nasknit
Freedom isn't free.
08:03 PM on 01/17/2012
E-verify EVERY job, E-verify before one cent in entitlements are given! Most will self-deport, once cut off from the government "gravy train".