ALERTS
Final week of email filing: Email filing with EOIR ends at the remaining courts on September 4, 2021.
CDC Requirements for Immigrant Medical Examinations: COVID vaccine to be required for medical exams starting October 1, 2021.
NEWS
Court won’t block order requiring reinstatement of “remain in Mexico” policy
SCOTUSblog: The Supreme Court on Tuesday night rejected the Biden administration’s plea for a reprieve from a district-court order requiring it to reinstate a Trump-era program known as the “remain in Mexico” policy, which requires asylum seekers to stay in Mexico while they wait for a hearing in U.S. immigration court. The court was divided on the decision to deny relief, with the court’s three liberal justices – Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan – indicating that they would have granted the government’s request and put the district court’s order on hold. See also The Supreme Court’s stunning, radical immigration decision, explained; Biden administration will continue challenging ‘Remain in Mexico’.
U.S. officials provided Taliban with names of Americans, Afghan allies to evacuate
Politico: U.S. officials in Kabul gave the Taliban a list of names of American citizens, green card holders and Afghan allies to grant entry into the militant-controlled outer perimeter of the city’s airport, a choice that’s prompted outrage behind the scenes from lawmakers and military officials. See also In evacuation mission’s 11th hour, hope dims for Afghans seeking escape.
Federal judge orders ICE to test detainees for COVID-19
AP: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement must test detainees for COVID-19 before they are transferred to the immigrant detention center in Tacoma, a federal judge ordered Monday.
Little-Known Federal Software Can Trigger Revocation of Citizenship
The Intercept: ATLAS helps DHS investigate immigrants’ personal relationships and backgrounds, examining biometric information like fingerprints and, in certain circumstances, considering an immigrant’s race, ethnicity, and national origin. It draws information from a variety of unknown sources, plus two that have been criticized as being poorly managed: the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Database, also known as the terrorist watchlist, and the National Crime Information Center. Powered by servers at tech giant Amazon, the system in 2019 alone conducted 16.5 million screenings and flagged more than 120,000 cases of potential fraud or threats to national security and public safety.
Migrant children spend weeks at US shelters as more arrive
AP: Five months after the Biden administration declared an emergency and raced to set up shelters to house a record number of children crossing the U.S.-Mexico border alone, kids continue to languish at the sites, while more keep coming, child welfare advocates say.
A Squalid Border Camp Finally Closed. Now Another One Has Opened.
NYT: a new camp sprang up about 55 miles farther west, in the Mexican city of Reynosa, and this one, aid workers say, is far worse than the one at Matamoros ever was. Overcrowded already, with more than 2,000 people, it is filthy and foul-smelling, lacking the health and sanitation infrastructure that nonprofit groups had spent months installing at Matamoros. Assaults and kidnappings for ransom are commonplace.
A Texas Sheriff’s Grim Task: Finding Bodies as Migrant Deaths Surge
NYT: . Through July, Border Patrol officials found 383 dead migrants, the highest toll in nearly a decade, and one already far surpassing the 253 recovered in the previous fiscal year.
Gov. DeSantis Demands Info On Migrants Moving To Fla.
Law360: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis demanded the Biden administration provide personal information on undocumented migrants being relocated to Florida, including names, addresses and the number of people who tested positive for COVID-19 or refused the coronavirus vaccine.
Feds OK’d Work Authorization For 800K Without Full Vetting
Law360: A federal watchdog on Wednesday called on U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to improve its employment eligibility verification system, finding shortcomings that kept the agency from accurately confirming workers’ identities and work authorization in at least 800,000 instances.
LITIGATION/CASELAW/RULES/MEMOS
Supreme Court Allows “Remain in Mexico” Policy to Be Reinstated
AILA: The Supreme Court denied the application for a stay and thus preventing the Biden administration’s effort to halt the reminstatement of “Remain in Mexico.” (Biden, et al. v. Texas, et al., 8/24/21)
Week Ahead in Immigration: Aug. 30, 2021
Reuters: Here are some upcoming events of interest to the immigration law community. All times are local unless stated otherwise.
CA5 Extends Stay on Preliminary Injunction on Biden Enforcement Memos Indefinitely
AILA: The court extended the district court stay on the preliminary injunction on the Biden immigration enforcement memos indefinitely. (Texas, et al., v. USA, et al., 8/27/21)
2nd Circ. Says Judge Unfairly Nitpicked Asylee’s Story
Law360: A Nepalese asylum-seeker has another shot at avoiding deportation after the Second Circuit ruled Friday that an immigration judge had prematurely declared his story of Maoist intimidation and violence not credible without giving him a chance to address minor discrepancies.
2nd Circ. Says Asylum-Seeker Could Have Moved Within India
Law360: The Second Circuit rejected an immigrant’s arguments Wednesday that after being beaten by members of a rival political party for his affiliation with a Sikh party, he could not escape the threat of more violence by moving within India, affirming a Board of Immigration Appeals’ decision to deny asylum and deport the man.
BIA Must Weigh 5th Circ. Ruling In Cannabis Removal Order
Law360: A panel of Fifth Circuit judges vacated a Pakistani man’s deportation order issued after he was convicted for synthetic marijuana possession, finding that the Board of Immigration Appeals failed to fully consider whether his state law conviction is equivalent to federal drug law.
AILA: Where the petitioner alleged that the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Sessions v. Dimaya made his removal unlawful, the court held that the BIA did not err by construing his motion as a motion to reconsider nor by denying it as time barred. (Gonzalez Hernandez v. Garland, 8/13/21)
CA8 Finds BIA Erred by Failing to Apply Matter of Sanchez Sosa Factors to U Visa Applicants
AILA: The court granted the petition for review of the BIA’s denial of the petitioners’ motion to reopen, finding the BIA abused its discretion by departing from established policy when it failed to apply the Matter of Sanchez Sosa factors. (Gonzales Quecheluno v. Garland, 8/12/21)
CA8 Upholds Denial of Deferral of Removal Under the CAT to Somalian Petitioner
AILA: Where BIA had reversed the IJ’s findings that petitioner would more likely than not be tortured in Somalia, the court found that BIA applied the correct legal standard to the Convention Against Torture (CAT) claim and did not engage in impermissible fact finding. (Mohamed v. Garland, 8/13/21)
8th Circ. Says INA ‘Vagueness’ Can’t Stop Deportation
Law360: The Eighth Circuit refused to stop an Ethiopian refugee’s deportation, ruling Friday that a portion of the Immigration and Nationality Act allowing the deportation of certain migrants who face persecution upon return is ambiguous, but not unconstitutionally vague.
9th Circ. Slams Judge For Nitpicking Rape Survivor Testimony
Law360: The Ninth Circuit Wednesday revived a Cameroonian rape survivor’s asylum bid, ruling that the immigration judge cherry-picked discrepancies in the woman’s testimony to justify deporting her and “displayed a dubious understanding of how rape survivors ought to act.”
AILA: The court upheld BIA’s determination that petitioner was ineligible for cancellation of removal under INA §240A(b)(1)(C) due to his conviction for an offense described in INA §212(a)(2), even though he had been previously admitted into the United States. (Sanchez-Ruano v. Garland, 8/11/21)
AILA: The court held that the IJ failed to put the petitioner on notice that his alleged false claim of U.S. citizenship would be at issue during his hearing, and that such failure violated due process by denying him a full and fair hearing. (Flores-Rodriguez v. Garland, 8/16/21)
AILA: The court found it lacked jurisdiction to review petitioner’s challenge to his expedited removal proceedings, concluding that the Supreme Court’s decision in DHS v. Thuraissigiam abrogated any colorable constitutional claim exception to INA §242(a)(2)(A). (Guerrier v. Garland, 8/16/21)
AILA: The court held that an Interpol Red Notice, among other evidence, created a serious reason to believe that the petitioner had committed a serious nonpolitical crime before entering the United States, and that he was ineligible for withholding of removal. (Villalobos Sura v. Garland, 8/17/21)
AILA: The court held that the record did not compel the conclusion that the petitioner suffered hardship in India that rose to the level of past persecution, where he did not experience significant physical harm and his harm was an isolated event, among other factors. (Sharma v. Garland, 8/17/21)
CA9 Says Vehicle Theft Under California Vehicle Code §10851(a) Is Not an Aggravated Felony
AILA: Granting in part the petition for review, the court held that vehicle theft under California Vehicle Code §10851(a) is indivisible in its treatment of accessories after the fact, and thus is not an aggravated felony theft offense under INA §101(a)(43)(G). (Lopez-Marroquin v. Garland, 8/18/21)
AILA: The court denied the petition for review, holding that because petitioner was convicted of a violation of 18 USC §1546(a) and his sentence was greater than one year, his conviction expressly fell under the definition of aggravated felony in INA §101(a)(43)(P). (Germain v. Att’y Gen., 8/18/21)
Split 11th Circ. Won’t Revive Sri Lankan’s Asylum Bid
Law360: A split Eleventh Circuit panel refused Tuesday to grant asylum to a member of a Sri Lankan ethnic minority or to block his deportation, ruling he hasn’t proven past persecution or credible fear of future persecution.
Federal Court Blocks Texas Migrant Transportation Order
Law360: A Texas federal judge has blocked an executive order from the state’s governor banning the transportation of certain migrants in the state, holding it violates the supremacy clause of the Constitution by authorizing state officials to make federal immigration determinations.
ICE Must Test Migrants Before Sending Them To Wash. Center
Law360: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement must test immigrants for COVID-19 before transferring them to a Washington state detention center, after a federal judge blamed the agency for 240 detainees and facility staff contracting the virus over the past three months.
DHS Says Border Turnback Policy Doesn’t Exist
Law360: The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has told a California federal judge that it could not produce an administrative record related to its practice of turning back asylum-seekers at the southern border because no such policy existed.
AILA: USCIS provided information regarding a proposed class settlement in A.O., et al. v. Jaddou, et al. No. 19-cv-6151 (N.D. Cal.) regarding juvenile court orders in the California Juvenile Court with subsequent filed Special Immigrant Juvenile (SIJ) petitions after the age of 18 years old.
DHS Releases Guidance on Parole for Certain Afghan Nationals Into the U.S.
AILA: DHS released a memo with guidance on immigration processing for certain Afghan nationals, stating that they will be paroled into the U.S. on a case-by-case basis for a two-year period and may be eligible to apply for status through USCIS.
EOIR Announces Launch of FOIA Public Access Link
AILA: EOIR launched its FOIA Public Access Link (PAL), which will allow users to submit requests, check the status of requests, download records, browse the FOIA reading room, and correspond with the EOIR FOIA Service Center. The PAL also allows users to pay required fees online.
AILA: ICE issued interim guidance to all OPLA attorneys to guide them in appropriately executing interim civil immigration enforcement and removal priorities and exercising prosecutorial discretion. Note, on 8/19/21, OPLA suspended reliance on this guidance due to litigation.
Application for Waiver of Grounds of Inadmissibility
USCIS: Starting 10/26/21, we will only accept the 7/20/21 version.
RESOURCES
- AILA: How to Request CIS Ombudsman’s Individual Case Assistance
- AILA: Find Resources for Assisting Afghan Clients
- AILA: Practice Alert: Impact of Ongoing Litigation on the Exercise of Prosecutorial Discretion
- AILA: Practice Alert: Proposed Rule to Change Asylum Processing for Individuals in Expedited Removal
- AILA: Practice Alert: Starting October 1, COVID-19 Vaccinations Required for Applicants Applying for LPR or Refugee Status
- AILA: Practice Alert: Changes to USCIS Field Office Interview Scheduling
- AILA: Practice Alert: Impact of Ongoing Litigation on the Exercise of Prosecutorial Discretion
- AILA: Practice Pointer: Heightened Scrutiny of Individuals of Iranian Descent
- AILA: Liaison Update: Key Takeaways from AILA Meeting with CIS Ombudsman
- AILA: How to Request CIS Ombudsman’s Individual Case Assistance
- CLINIC: Frequently Asked Questions: TPS Eligibility and the Application Process
- CLINIC: New ICE “Victim-Centered” Policy Protects Noncitizens Eligible for Humanitarian Relief
- CLINIC: Assistance for Afghans Toolkit
- EOIR: FOIA Public Access Link
- ICE: Attorney Information and Resources
- ICE: New ERO Varick detained contact list (attached)
- ICE: Updated NYC OPLA Instructions for PD (attached)
- ILRC: Enforcement Priorities Litigation Update: August 2021
- ILRC: Potential Remedies for Immigrant Families After Losing a Family Member to the Pandemic – Widow(er)s of U.S. Citizens, 204(l), and Humanitarian Reinstatement
- ILRC: Probation Agencies and the Deportation Pipeline
- IRAP SIV/P-2 Training for Attorneys
- USCIS: Temporary Protected Status (TPS) Webinar PowerPoint (PDF, 1.26 MB)
- USCIS: Temporary Protected Status (TPS) Webinar Questions and Answers (PDF, 174.17 KB)
- USCIS: Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti Questions and Answers (PDF, 226.5 KB)
- USCIS: Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti Webinar (PDF, 1.55 MB)
- USCIS: Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Somalia Questions and Answers (PDF, 145.65 KB)
- USCIS: Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Somalia Webinar (PDF, 1.24 MB)
- USCIS: Online Filing Webinar: Form I-821, Application for Temporary Protected Status (PDF, 3.58 MB)
EVENTS
- 8/31/21 Hot Topics in Marriage-Based Adjustment of Status
- 9/2/21 EOIR to Host Information Sessions in Advance of EOIR Courts & Appeals System (ECAS) Launch at Certain Immigration Courts
- 9/2/21-9/23/21 Waiver Series: Dealing with Denials
- 9/8/21 Fearless Lawyering: Administrative Closure Breaking Updates and Strategies
- 9/9/21 APA Litigation: How to Take a USCIS Denial to Federal Court
- 9/14/21 USCIS Virtual Listening Session on Public Charge Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
- 9/15/21 Introduction to BIA Appeals
- 9/15/21 Legal Remedies for Immigrant Survivors: Introductory Seminar Series – Part III: Getting Survivors & Their Families to the Finish Line
- 9/16/21 Managing Immigration Compliance in a Remote and Hybrid Post-Pandemic World
- 9/17/21 Strategic Considerations in the Wake of Niz-Chavez
- 9/22/21 Adjustment of Status: Eligibility and Pitfalls
- 9/23/21 EOIR to Host Information Sessions in Advance of EOIR Courts & Appeals System (ECAS) Launch at Certain Immigration Courts
- 9/23/21 Representing Children in Immigration Matters 2021: Effective Advocacy and Best Practices
- 9/27/21-9/28/21 Immigration Law and Policy Conference
- 9/28/21 Waiver Series: Overview of the Grounds of Inadmissibility
- 9/29/21 Temporary Protected Status: Updates and Options
- 9/30/21 Crafting a Winning Direct Examination: Practical Tips and Examples
- 9/30/21 Naturalization and Crimes
- 10/5/21 USCIS Virtual Listening Session on Public Charge Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
- 10/5/21 Waiver Series: Working With Clients to Build Strong Waiver Cases
- 10/6/21 Challenging Agency Delays in District Court
- 10/7/21 Introduction to Derivation of Citizenship
- 10/5/21 Waiver Series: Extreme Hardship and Discretion
- 10/13/21 Liberian Refugee Immigration Fairness Act: Updates 10/13/21
- 10/14/21 Detention & Deportation System for Children and Youth
- 10/19/21 Webinar Series: Putting the Case Together
- 10/19/21 The Categorical Approach Now
- 10/20/21 What is Happening with DACA?
- 10/21/21 Public Charge: Advising Clients in the Current Landscape
- 10/26/21 Emerging Issues in Asylum Law
- 10/27/21 Challenging Expedited Removal and Reinstatement Orders
- 11/2/21 U Visa Adjustment
- 11/10/21 Remedies for Surviving Relatives
- 11/11/21 Inadmissibility: A Look at Common Grounds and Red Flags
- 11/16/21 Advocating for Prosecutorial Discretion Under the Current Enforcement Priorities
- 11/23/21 Establishing Social Group in Asylum Claims
- 11/29/21-12/3/21 Partial to Full Accredited Representative Initiative 2021
- 12/1/21 54th Annual Immigration and Naturalization Institute
- 12/2/21 Post-Conviction Relief For Immigrants: New Laws, New Developments, New Advice
- 12/7/21 Hardship in Non-LPR Cancellation Cases
- 12/9/21 December Immigration Update
- 12/15/21 FOIA
ImmProf
Monday, August 30, 2021
- EU to recommend reinstating Covid-related travel restrictions on US, reports say
- Podcast: Rethinking immigration on The Weeds
- Naturalized Citizen of the Day: Sandra Ok, Actress (Canada)
Sunday, August 29, 2021
Saturday, August 28, 2021
- 58th Anniversary of “I Have a Dream”
- Trump Aide Stephen Miller Laid Groundwork For Disastrous Afghan Evacuation
Friday, August 27, 2021
- From The Bookshelves: Clamouring for Legal Protection–What the Great Books Teach Us About People Fleeing from Persecution
- Jennifer Chacon | Our History of Policing Migration Through the Criminal Justice System
- Vigil for Haitian Immigrant Fighting Detention and Removal
Thursday, August 26, 2021
- Female Afghani Robotics Team Makes it to Mexico
- Circuit Judge Appointed by Ronald Reagan Finds that IJ and BIA “Nitpicked” in Adverse Credibility Determination in Asylum Case
Wednesday, August 25, 2021
- From the Bookshelves: Our Grandfathers Were Braceros And We Too…
- More on Supreme Court’s Order Keeping MPP in Place
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
- Breaking News: SCOTUS Declines to Stay Injunction Preventing Rescission of MPP
- Airbnb Offers to Host Afghan Refguees
- Immigration Article of the Day: Unpacking the Rise in Crimmigration Cases at the Supreme Court by Philip Torrey
Monday, August 23, 2021
- Disputes About Quotas for Social Security Judges Offer Insight On IJ Caseloads
- EOIR Rolls Out “Dedicated Dockets” For Families Seeking Asylum
- Supreme Court To Review Bond Hearings For Detained Immigrants
- Why Mass Immigration Is the Key to American Renewal Our economy, politics, and culture all need the revitalization only immigrants can provide.
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Thanks, Elizabeth! It’s interesting and satisfying that several Circuits, including the 2d and the 9th, are openly rejecting EOIR’s practice of “nit-picking” asylum applicants’ testimony in an attempt to deny meritorious applications. It’s all part of the “culture of denial” that continues to flourish at EOIR’s deportation assembly line under Garland.
Sadly, the Circuits haven’t yet had the guts to face the larger problem here — the EOIR system, as currently staffed with too many “Trump plants” as judges and a continuing lack of expertise and anti-asylum, anti-immigrant bias is clearly unconstitutional under the Fifth Amendment!
Indeed, some Circuit panels take judicial review seriously, others function as rubber stamps, and most individuals wronged in Immigration Court lack the lawyers and wherewithal to take their case to the Circuits. This means that inconsistent results and lack of consistently applied expertise at all levels of the Federal legal system just add to the inconsistencies and unfairness heaped on migrants in violation of the Due Process Clause. To date, no Circuit has been willing to act on the glaring constitutional defects at EOIR staring them in the face.
Unhappily, Congress also has failed to act on long-overdue legislation to create an independent, Article I Immigration Court. In the interim, it would be possible to ameliorate, if not entirely eliminate, these constitutional problems by replacing marginally qualified IJs and BIA judges with well-qualified progressive experts and then giving them independence to issue precedents and make necessary procedural and structural changes to restore some semblence of Due Process, quality control, fair procedures, and efficiency to this disgracefully dysfunctional, unnecessarily backlogged system. The private bar could be constructively involved in creating universal representation and sane docket management. Indeed experts recommended these very changes to Garland, only to be ignored in favor of the “same old, same old” incredible mess and gross indifference to both the rule of law and human life at EOIR!
Not surprisingly, a recently issued report from the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) highlighted lack of “shareholder engagement” — something specifically discouraged by the Trump kakistocracy — as an endemic and continuing problem at EOIR. https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-21-104404
Shareholder engagement means having a meaningful dialogue with those practicing before the courts, and honestly considering their input in advance of promulgating new policies. So called “Town Halls” to announce unilaterally developed bureaucratic policies are the antithesis of this meaningful process. It’s no mystery why EOIR continues to founder and stumble under Garland.
🇺🇸Due Process Forever!
PWS
09-01-21