MCALLEN, Tex.
When Magistrate Judge Peter E. Ormsby stepped into the federal courtroom here Tuesday morning, 75 defendants rose to their feet.
Their ankles were shackled, and they wore headsets through which the proceedings would be translated into Spanish. In the hallway, just beyond the door, was a pile of handcuffs that had been removed before they entered the courtroom.
Most of the defendants appeared dressed in the same filthy, sweat-saturated clothes they had been wearing two days before, when they were apprehended crossing the Rio Grande aboard rafts.
CONTENT FROM PRIME VIDEO“When you have diverse views, it makes the outcome for all people better.” – Justice Anne McKeig
In all but 11 of their cases, this criminal misdemeanor was the first time they had ever been found to have violated U.S. law.
Ormsby informed them his was not an immigration court. Many had already signed away their rights to further proceedings and had orders for what is known as “expedited removal.” They had done that before the 17 lawyers of the public defender’s office had met with any of them for the first time, just hours before.
The next two hours would see each one of them plead guilty and be sentenced, most to time already served.
With few exceptions, each case would be dealt with in under 75 seconds.
This was just the morning docket. It is what President Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy looks like here, where busloads of recently detained migrants roll up to the federal courthouse several times a day. Ormsby invited me and a handful of other observers there to sit in the jury box, because there was no room anywhere else.
The president contends that even this assembly-line version of justice is more than what those caught entering the country illegally should get.
“We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country,” Trump tweeted Sunday. “When somebody comes in, we must immediately, with no Judges or Court Cases, bring them back from where they came. Our system is a mockery to good immigration policy and Law and Order.”
On that latter point, the president is correct — but it is for the reverse of the reasoning he offers. His zero-tolerance policy is putting even more stress on a legal system that already gives migrants far less than their day in court.
The outcome for many might be different if they had fuller access to the legal system, to which they are entitled in theory if not practice, and given an opportunity to make their case to stay in this country.
Trump has mocked proposals for adding to the number of immigration judges, who handle separate proceedings for those who want to remain.
“We have thousands of judges already,” he has claimed. That is incorrect. The number actually stands at fewer than 350 across the country. They are facing a backlog of more than 700,000 cases.
Just as critical as the scarcity of judges is the fact that so few migrants ever have a chance to consult an attorney.
Only about 14 percent of those who are detained have access to counsel, says American Bar Association President Hilarie Bass, who was here from Miami. She added that migrant adults with lawyers win slightly more than half their cases and get to stay in this country, while 9 out of 10 of those without representation lose and are deported.
For unaccompanied children, the disparity in outcomes is even greater. As Bass noted: “How can you ask a 12-year-old to walk into court and make a case for themselves?”
Under Trump’s zero-tolerance policy, more migrants are being prosecuted and deported on the border, rather than being sent to other parts of the country where they can await trial while staying with relatives or others who can take them in. That has compounded the challenge, because it adds to the backlog in this region and makes it more difficult for migrants to find lawyers.
In the current crisis, platoons of lawyers are arriving weekly to volunteer their services, but there are not nearly enough, says Kimi Jackson, director of the South Texas Pro Bono Asylum Representation Project. “What we need most here are Spanish-speaking immigration attorneys, particularly ones who can stay a little longer.” The need will remain for the foreseeable future, long after the journalists and cameras have moved on to the next story.
And even if help comes, it will be too late for most of those who appeared before Ormsby. As he worked his way through their cases, he expressed sympathy for the circumstances of poverty and violence that brought them from dangerous places in Honduras and El Salvador and Mexico to his courtroom. He wished them and their families well and urged them to go through the process of coming to the United States legally.
“Seeing the type of people you appear to be,” the magistrate added, “I hope that you will be successful with that.”
But everyone there knew that was a wish, and one unlikely to come true.
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- Mostly first offenders who didn’t belong in criminal court anyway.
- Why would nonviolent first offenders be shackled in court?
- Anybody understand what they are pleading guilty to?
- Everybody understand that they have a right to a full trial at which the Government would have to prove guilt?
- Anybody understand what a port of entry is?
- Anybody just looking for an officer to apply for asylum?
- Anybody realize there are strong legal arguments that criminal sanctions can’t be invoked against good faith asylum seekers under international treaties to which the U.S. is party?
- Anybody know the name of their court-appointed lawyer?
- Anybody have a chance to speak with their lawyer in private in Spanish?
- Anybody have a “know your rights” presentation about the immigration system?
- Anybody know what a “credible fear” interview is, how to request one from the DHS, and how to get review of a denial?
- Anybody know that asylum applicants who pass credible fear can request bond?
- Anybody understand the consequences of a conviction?
- Anybody pressured to plead guilty to get their kids back or get out of detention?
- Anybody know how the asylum process works and how to apply?
- Anybody know how important lawyers are for asylum seekers and how to get in touch with local pro bono lawyers?
- Anybody separated from kids?
- Anybody know that the Government has been ordered by a more conscientious Federal Judge to reunite families?
We’ll probably never know the answers, because that might have exceeded Judge Ormsby’s 75 second attention span and cut into his productivity stats.
I’ve commented before on the Judge Ormsby’s judicial performance (or lack thereof).
Judge Ormsby should be in line for a Jeff Sessions “Volume Is Everything — Due Process Is Nothing” award! He appears to be just the type of subservient judicial toady Trump & McConnell would love to have on the Supremes. And, I wouldn’t let the U.S. District Judges who are in charge of this judicial farce off the hook either.
Someday, the true history of the abuses of human values, human rights, and our Constitution now going on at our border under a White Nationalist regime will be written. And the “go along to get along” crowd will be held accountable for their conduct; by the judgment of history, if not by the law.
PWS
06-29-18