Trump administration officials said Monday they will impose quotas on
federal immigration judges in an attempt to speed up deportations, Fox
News has confirmed.
A Justice Department official speaking to Fox News cited enormous court
backlogs. “These performance metrics... are designed to increase
productivity and efficiency in the system without compromising due
process.”
Meantime, President Trump lamented the sluggishness of the deportation
process on Monday night.
“As ridiculous as it sounds, the laws of our country do not easily allow
us to send those crossing our Southern Border back where they came from.
A whole big wasted procedure must take place. Mexico & Canada have tough
immigration laws, whereas ours are an Obama joke. ACT CONGRESS,” Trump
tweete
The Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review says
judges must complete 700 cases a year to earn a satisfactory grade. They
currently are completing an average of 678 cases per year, according to
the Justice official.
The new request averages to
about three per day, and judges with high caseloads can appeal
internally to waive the requirement.
Critics claim speed requirements
undermine judges’ independence and will cause some cases to be decided
too hastily.
The new
standards, which take effect Oct. 1, include a host of other measures
indicating how much time judges should spend on different types of cases
and court motions. The
Washington Post was
first to report the plan.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions,
who oversees the immigration courts, has called repeatedly for more
speed as an increase in deportation arrests has pushed the court backlog
above 650,000 cases.
Still, he had held off on
numerical quotas until now.
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