
Attorney, NY Legal Assistance Group
Publisher of “The Gibson Report”
TOP UPDATES
Trump Administration Proposes Adding Minor Crimes to List of Offenses that Bar Asylum
NYT: The new rule, issued by the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security, would expand the list of crimes that bar migrants from asylum to include misdemeanor offenses, including driving under the influence, possession of fake identification and drug possession, including having more than 30 grams of of marijuana… The administration would also deny asylum to migrants caught crossing the border after receiving a deportation order and those who illegally received public benefits.
Under secret Stephen Miller plan, ICE to use data on migrant children to expand deportation efforts
WaPo: The White House sought this month to embed immigration enforcement agents within the U.S. refugee agency that cares for unaccompanied migrant children, part of a long-standing effort to use information from their parents and relatives to target them for deportation, according to six current and former administration officials.
Guatemala Is Set to Finalize Deal With U.S. to Accept Mexican Asylum Seekers
WSJ: Guatemala is set to finalize within days a deal to expand its asylum agreement with the U.S. to begin accepting Mexican migrants sent from the southern U.S. border, U.S. and Guatemalan officials familiar with the talks said.
The employment green card backlog tops 800,000, most of them Indian. A solution is elusive.
WaPo: An estimated 800,000 immigrants who are working legally in the United States are waiting for a green card, an unprecedented backlog in employment-based immigration that has fueled a bitter policy debate but has been largely overshadowed by President Trump’s border wall fight and the administration’s focus on migrant crossings from Mexico.
The radical immigration changes under Trump that went unnoticed
Quartz: Social media tracking, Increased denaturalization efforts, Expansion of “public charge” definition, Domestic violence no longer grounds for asylum, Limits to Temporary Protected Status (TPS), Secret policies.
International Students Worry As A Popular Work Program Is Questioned
WGBH: Concerns are growing as the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia considers a legal motion filed by a private group to cancel the federal program.
USA Today: A USA TODAY Network investigation revealed sex assaults, routine use of physical force, poor medical care and deaths at facilities overseen by ICE.
Contrasting Experiences: MPP vs. Non-MPP Immigration Court Cases
TRAC: MPP Results in Slightly Longer Wait Times for First Hearing…Asylum Seekers in the US are 7 Times More Likely to Have an Attorney…Most Asylum Seekers Attend Their Hearings Unless Forced to Remain in Mexico.
Former Immigration Judges Send Letter Expressing Concern Over Lack of Public Access to MPP Hearings
On 12/10/19, former immigration judges sent a letter to EOIR requesting that it investigate violations of due process rights during MPP hearings and ensure that the public has appropriate access to all immigration courts. AILA Doc. No. 19121700
Includes:
Susan F. Aikman, Immigration Judge, Batavia Immigration Court
Jennifer Chung, Immigration Judge, New York, Federal Plaza Immigration Court
Diane L. Dodd, Immigration Judge, New York, Federal Plaza Immigration Court
David A. Norkin, Immigration Judge, New York, Varick Immigration Court (yes, former court administrator)
John J. Siemietkowski, Immigration Judge, New York, Federal Plaza Immigration Court
Rantideva Singh, Immigration Judge, New York, Federal Plaza Immigration Court
New Permanent ACIJ at New York – Federal Plaza Immigration Court
EOIR: Effective January 20, ACIJ Carrie Johnson will be the permanent ACIJ for the New York – Federal Plaza Immigration Court. ACIJ Johnson is currently the ACIJ for the Newark and Elizabeth Immigration Courts and will remain in those positions. ACIJ Sheila McNulty will continue to serve as the Acting ACIJ for the New York – Broadway, New York – Varick, Fishkill, and Ulster Immigration Courts.
New York sees surge in new driver’s licenses thanks to undocumented immigrants
NY Post: New York State saw a 133 percent surge in new learner permits issued Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday as undocumented immigrants were able to apply for licenses for the first time. See also As Historic ‘Green Light’ Law Goes Into Effect, Immigrants Warned of Driver’s License Scams and New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signs bill allowing undocumented immigrants to get licenses.
How ICE Uses Social Media To Surveil And Arrest Immigrants
Intercept: In this case, ICE used Thomson Reuters’s controversial CLEAR database, part of a growing industry of commercial data brokers that contract with government agencies, essentially circumventing barriers that might prevent the government from collecting certain types of information. See also California DOJ Cuts Off ICE Deportation Officers from State Law Enforcement Database.
U.S. citizenship path for thousands of Liberians tucked in spending bill
Reuters: The pathway to citizenship – even for a relatively small cohort of immigrants – is a victory for pro-migrant activists and lawmakers who pushed for citizenship for Liberians covered by temporary deportation relief programs.
LITIGATION/CASELAW/RULES/MEMOS
Immigrants’ Appeal of Removal Order Subject to Equitable Tolling
Bloomberg: The 30-day limitations period for an immigrant to appeal an order requiring him to be removed from the U.S. isn’t jurisdictional, and thus may be equitably tolled, the Second Circuit said Dec. 19.
USCIS updated its policy manual to clarify the effect of travel abroad by TPS beneficiaries with final removal orders. Per USCIS, TPS beneficiaries who depart and return to the U.S. based on authorization to travel remain in the exact same immigration status and circumstances as when they left. AILA Doc. No. 19122036
Rakoff Refuses to Dismiss Lawsuit to Halt Immigration Arrests at State Courthouses
NYLJ: U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff of the Southern District of New York said the lawsuit from New York Attorney General Letitia James and Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez raised valid claims that the practice could have deleterious effects on the criminal justice system.
Cert granted in Pereida v. Barr
SCOTUSblog: The justices will decide whether a noncitizen who is convicted of a state crime can apply for relief from deportation – such as asylum or cancellation of removal – when the state-court record is ambiguous about whether his conviction corresponds to an offense listed in the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Lawsuit says Trump’s green-card rules show preference for ‘the wealthy and the white’
WaPo: Organizations critical of President Trump’s immigration policies filed a broad lawsuit Thursday challenging new restrictions for green-card seekers who may need government help to pay for food and health care…It seeks to block the State Department from moving forward with its public-charge rules, and specifically singles out Trump’s October decree — titled “Presidential Proclamation on the Suspension of Entry of Immigrants Who Will Financially Burden the United States Healthcare System” — requiring green-card applicants to have “approved” medical coverage or sufficient resources to pay for their medical costs out of pocket.
Lawsuit Says Immigration Courts Are Now Deportation Machines
AP: The lawsuit filed by the Southern Poverty Law Center in Washington, D.C., and Innovation Law Lab of Portland, Oregon, said that instead of being fair and impartial, judges in immigration courts answer to Attorney General Robert Barr and are pushed to deny applications for asylum.
DOJ and DHS issued a joint notice of proposed rulemaking to provide seven additional mandatory bars to eligibility for asylum for individuals who commit certain criminal offenses in the U.S. The proposed rule would also remove provisions regarding reconsideration of discretionary denials of asylum. AILA Doc. No. 19121835
Featured Issue: Denaturalization Efforts by USCIS
The Trump administration announced the opening of an office to focus on identifying immigrants who are suspected of cheating to get their green cards or citizenship and will seek to denaturalize these individuals. Watch this page for updates and resources from AILA. AILA Doc. No. 18072705
USCIS Provides Q&As from Special Immigrant Juvenile Policy Clarifications Engagement
USCIS provided Q&As from its December 10, 2019, engagement on the recent Special Immigrant Juvenile (SIJ) adopted AAO decisions and the corresponding policy manual update. AILA Doc. No. 19122002
The U.S. Resumes Returning Mexican Nationals to the Interior of Mexico
ICE and the Mexican Ministry of the Interior announced the continuation of the Interior Repatriation Initiative. The first 2019 repatriation flight of approximately 150 Mexican nationals departed Tucson International Airport on December 19, 2019. AILA Doc. No. 19122000
ACTIONS
- USCIS and EOIR Joint Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Bars to Asylum Eligibility Comments are due 1/21/20.
- USCIS Proposed Rule with Adjustments to Fee Schedule and Other Changes Comments are due 12/30/19 (EXTENDED).
- DHS Proposed Rule on Employment Authorization for Asylum Applicants Comments are due 1/13/20.
- Think Immigration: Individuals Seeking Protection in El Paso Detention Centers Continue to Face the Impossible. Help Us Push Back.
RESOURCES
- TRAC’s updated MPP web query tool
- AO: Asylum Lesson Plans
- AILA Submits Amicus Brief on Migrant Protection Protocol (MPP) Proceedings
- Featured Issue: Public Charge Changes at USCIS, DOJ, and DOS
- New Education Report Uncovers Pressing Need for Quality Programs and Funding to Support the Integration and Success of New York’s Young Children and Their Immigrant Families
EVENTS
- 1/15/120 NY Counts 2020 State Convening
- 1/16/20 Resilience 2.0: Next Steps Lawyers Can Take to Make Bouncing Back Part of the Culture
- 2/6/20 Basic Immigration Law 2020: Business, Family, Naturalization and Related Areas
- 2/7/20 Asylum, Special Immigrant Juvenile Status, Crime Victim, and Other Forms of Immigration Relief 2020
- 2/28/20 5th Annual New York Asylum and Immigration Law Conference
- 7/23/20 Defending Immigration Removal Proceedings 2020
ImmProf
Monday, December 23, 2019
Sunday, December 22, 2019
- What’s next in the privatization of immigration? Privatized visa processing
- 25 Jewish members of Congress call on Trump to fire Stephen Miller over leaked emails
- Surprise, Surprise: Few Asylum-Seekers Winning Cases Under ‘Remain In Mexico’ Program
- Boundless: Immigration Policies with the Biggest Impacts in 2019
- America’s Voice — Immigration: Decade in Review
Saturday, December 21, 2019
- Executive Office for Immigration Review to Swear in 28 Immigration Judges, Bringing Judge Corps to Highest Level in History
- Fourth Circuit willing to review challenge to Census Bureau’s inadequate preparations
Friday, December 20, 2019
- Legal challenge to State Department public charge rules
- Deep Political Divide on Race and Immigration
- Democrats Blast Trump’s Immigration Policies at Debate
- The Most Disturbing and Most Inspiring Immigration Stories of 2019
Thursday, December 19, 2019
- The Story Behind Neil Gaiman’s What You Need To Be Warm
- What You Need to be Warm by Neil Gaiman
- Lawsuit says immigration courts are deportation machines
- The radical immigration changes under Trump that went unnoticed
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
- India’s Supreme Court to Hear Challenges to Nation’s Citizenship Amendment Act
- The Beat Goes On! Joint Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to Restrict Certain “Criminal Aliens'” Eligibility for Asylum
- BREAKING NEWS: Supreme Court Grants Review in Criminal Removal Case
- The President’s Anti-Impeachment Letter to Speaker Pelosi
- USCIS Expands Guidance Related to Naturalization Requirement of Good Moral Character
- Immigration Article of the Day: Deporting Chevron: Why the Attorney General’s Immigration Decisions Should not Receive Chevron Deference by Richard Frankel
- International Migrants Day 18 December
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
- Must Watch TV: 60 Minutes Interview with El Salvador’s President
- From the Bookshelves: A Federal Right to Education: Fundamental Questions for Our Democracy by Kimberly Jenkins Robinson (editor)
- How Birthright Citizenship Could Threaten the “Samoan Way”
- Call for Proposals: Crimmigration, Capital, and Consequences 5th Biennial CINETS Conference
Monday, December 16, 2019
- What Will Conservative Win in UK Mean for Immigration?
- New Jersey Bill to Expand Driver’s Licenses Passes Legislature
- Canadian border rights withering, too
- The Bishop and the Imam: A Conversation on Immigration
- National Partnership for New Americans Seeking ED
- Top 10 Immigration Stories of 2019
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Note that DOJ/EOIR rally outdid themselves on Immigration Judge appointments with 27 “Government insiders,” most from DHS or other enforcement backgrounds, and only one “outside” appointment from private practice. As one of my Round Table colleagues quipped: “I guess they must have run out of ICE Assistant Chief Counsel.”
Time to be happy and thankful if you’re not a migrant seeking justice and mercy in Trump’s America.
Behind every tyrannical regime are complicit judges who fail to stand up for justice for the most vulnerable and deserving of protection!
Thanks again, Elizabeth for all you do for the New Due Process Army and the cause of American justice!
PWS
12-24-19