Sessions Takes Away 'Lifeline' for Tens of Thousands of Immigrants, Setting Stage for Quick Deportations

September 21, 2020 Off By EveAim

Immigrant rights advocates raised concerns on Friday about a decision reached by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, forbidding immigration judges from delaying hearings while immigrants await resolutions that could affect their cases—including their pending applications for visas and green cards. The move could reopen hundreds of thousands of deportation cases and result in the swift removal of many immigrants from the country.

Sessions issued the directive on Thursday, saying that judges’ closing of cases through a practice called administrative closure “effectively resulted in illegal aliens remaining indefinitely in the United States without any formal legal status.”

Critics say the decision was made only to further the Trump administration’s goal of maximizing deportations.

“We know he is part of Trump’s political agenda to rush cases through the system,” Trina Realmuto of the American Immigration Council told the Huffington Post of Sessions. “But as the attorney general, as the head of the Department of Justice, as the person who is certifying immigration cases to himself, he needs to be neutral, impartial and he needs to adjudicate without a political agenda.”

Immigration judges have for years used administrative closure to delay court proceedings if an immigrant is awaiting approval of a visa application or appealing a criminal conviction, as outcomes of such proceedings could affect their immigration cases.

NPR‘s Joel Rose described administrative closure as “a lifeline for tens of thousands of immigrants,” whose applications for visas and green cards can take years.

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT