removal – Wood Immigration Law http://woodimmigrationlaw.com Dedication To Immigration Mon, 22 May 2017 19:14:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Deportation Raids Are Back http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/announcements/deportation-raids-back/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/announcements/deportation-raids-back/#respond Thu, 12 May 2016 22:57:03 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=855 The Raids Are Back Reuters is reporting that US immigration officials are planning for sweeping deportation raids in May and...
Read More

The post Deportation Raids Are Back appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
The Raids Are Back

Reuters is reporting that US immigration officials are planning for sweeping deportation raids in May and June. The target is Central America mothers and children who unlawfully crossed the border and have an order of removal against them. Their planned raids are expected to be more comprehensive than their raids in January, which received attention.

The post Deportation Raids Are Back appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/announcements/deportation-raids-back/feed/ 0
DHS Raids Continue http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/announcements/708/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/announcements/708/#respond Fri, 05 Feb 2016 23:48:35 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=708 Raids Continue: DHS Specifically Targeting Orders of Removal in Absentia The Department of Homeland Security has continued its raids on...
Read More

The post DHS Raids Continue appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
Raids Continue:

DHS Specifically Targeting Orders of Removal in Absentia

The Department of Homeland Security has continued its raids on Central American immigrants who have orders of removal in absentia. These raids started in January of this year. The raids have continued in spite of DHS apprehensions of unaccompanied children or children with family members falling. The Democratic party is fissured over these raids. About half of the Democratic members of Congress have criticized the continuing raids.

The post DHS Raids Continue appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/announcements/708/feed/ 0
2015 DHS Statistics http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/facts/2015-dhs-statistics/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/facts/2015-dhs-statistics/#respond Tue, 05 Jan 2016 14:13:56 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=667 2015 DHS Statistics for Enforcement and Removal   The Department of Homeland Security has released statistics for immigration enforcement for...
Read More

The post 2015 DHS Statistics appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
2015 DHS Statistics for Enforcement and Removal

 

The Department of Homeland Security has released statistics for immigration enforcement for Fiscal Year 2015. DHS apprehended 406,595 with a total of 462,463 removals and returns. The Border Patrol made 337,117 apprehensions and Immigration and Customs Enforcement removed or returned 235,413 individuals. 91% of the returned individuals were convicted criminals, which has been a priority in reducing threats to public safety, border security, and national security. The data also indicate that fewer individuals are attempting to cross the border without authorization

The post 2015 DHS Statistics appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/facts/2015-dhs-statistics/feed/ 0
ICE Raids in January http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/ice-raids-in-january/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/ice-raids-in-january/#respond Tue, 29 Dec 2015 15:49:12 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=663 ICE Raids in January The Washington Post reported last week that the Obama Administration is planning to direct Immigration and...
Read More

The post ICE Raids in January appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
ICE Raids in January

The Washington Post reported last week that the Obama Administration is planning to direct Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to conduct raids on individuals who have orders of removal against them in absentia. The individuals are mostly from Central America and because their orders are in absentia, their cases for relief have not been heard by an immigration judge. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is an agency with the Department of Homeland Security, and it is responsible for securing the United States internally. Part of those responsibilities include seeking out individuals who are not authorized to be present in the United States.

The individuals targeted for removal have final orders against them, but in absentia means that for whatever reason, the immigration judge placed an order of removal against them when they were not present at their hearings. They may not even know that an order of removal is placed against them. The move by the Obama Administration seems to take a stark contrast to its recent years on the subject of unauthorized migrants. In 2012, an executive order for Deferred Action enabled millions of “Dreamers” to gain temporary legal stay. In 2014, additional executive actions sought to expand Deferred Action to more migrants without status, though their legality is currently being contested in courts. Before those executive actions, however, the Obama Administration was removing individuals at record rates.

Given that the presidential elections are less than a year away and primary season is just about to kick off, each action that the Obama Administration takes on immigration will have consequences in the election and for the candidates.

The post ICE Raids in January appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/ice-raids-in-january/feed/ 0
Children & Unauthorized Parents http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/children-unauthorized-parents/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/children-unauthorized-parents/#respond Wed, 23 Sep 2015 14:42:33 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=547 Children of Removed Parents Front and center of the primary election campaigns of presidential hopefuls is the issue of unauthorized...
Read More

The post Children & Unauthorized Parents appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
Children of Removed Parents

Front and center of the primary election campaigns of presidential hopefuls is the issue of unauthorized immigration. Estimates of unauthorized migrants in the United States range from 11-12 million individuals. They come from all over the world, but much of the attention falls upon people from Central American countries, who are often escaping poverty, civil wars, gang warfare, and

The George W. Bush administration removed millions of unauthorized individuals and the Obama administration was record-setting in its number of removals. The current administration attempted to re-prioritize the removal system in November of last year through executive actions. Part of the revamp was instituting Deferred Action for Parents of Americans. This program was judicially nixed before started receiving applications. The purpose behind it was family unity.

A motivation behind DAPA was that over 5 million children are living without authorized parents. That means they are constantly living in threat of losing one or both parents. The children are American by virtue of birthright citizenship, another issue that has become a lightning rod in primary election politics. Two studies have been conducted by the Migration Policy Institute and Urban Institute with assistance from DHS and ICE. The Washington Post has summarized the results. They cover what happens to the children of parents who have been removed from the United States.

The post Children & Unauthorized Parents appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/children-unauthorized-parents/feed/ 0
Immigration Court Backlog http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/facts/immigration-court-backlog/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/facts/immigration-court-backlog/#respond Tue, 19 May 2015 12:41:33 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=473 Immigration Court Backlog Worsens   One of the major news stories of last summer was the unforeseen increase in the...
Read More

The post Immigration Court Backlog appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
Immigration Court Backlog Worsens

 

One of the major news stories of last summer was the unforeseen increase in the number of unaccompanied children who crossed the American border. It was a humanitarian crisis (President Obama’s phrase) by itself, but it also had practical ramifications for immigration court. It swelled the number of individuals facing trial in immigration court and increased the already present backlog.

Immigration Court is facing its highest caseload in its history. At the conclusion of April 2015, there are 445,607 cases pending before the Immigration Courts. That represents a 9.2% increase from the beginning of the 2015 Fiscal Year and an astounding 29.5% increase from the beginning of the 2014 Fiscal Year. The Executive Office of Immigration Review is part of the Department of Justice and an Article I Court (executive branch of government). The unaccompanied children are a small part, however, of the overall immigration court backlog.

Please note that EOIR, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Department of Homeland Security are separate from USCIS, which grants immigration and nonimmigration benefits for individuals not in removal proceedings.

The four most represented nationalities in Immigration Court at the moment are Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. This is probably explained by their proximity and the current country conditions. China is the fifth most represented nationality. The states with the most individuals in removal proceedings are California, Texas, New York, Florida, and New Jersey. These are among the most populous states in the Union and also the states that have the most immigrants and visitors overall.

 

Thank you to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University for the statistics. It provides comprehensive, independent, and nonpartisan information about US federal immigration enforcement.

The post Immigration Court Backlog appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/facts/immigration-court-backlog/feed/ 0
Mass Deportation Bill? http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/mass-deportation-bill/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/mass-deportation-bill/#respond Thu, 19 Mar 2015 13:26:52 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=425 Mass Deportation Measures? While the DAPA and Expanded DACA programs are undergoing litigation between the Justice Department and federal court...
Read More

The post Mass Deportation Bill? appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
Mass Deportation Measures?

While the DAPA and Expanded DACA programs are undergoing litigation between the Justice Department and federal court system, the House of Representatives is working on removal legislation. The Michael Davis, Jr., and Danny Oliver in Honor of State and Local Law Enforcement Act would be the most severe form of immigration enforcement Congress has passed recently (if it did pass). The proposed legislation contains four parts:

  • Being in the United States without authorization is a civil offense. The bill seeks to make unauthorized presence a crime.
  • It would grant state and local law enforcement the power to enforce immigration law. Immigration law is firmly settled as federal law and non federal law enforcement would be enabled to detain anyone with probable cause of being present in the country without authorization.
  • Any immigrant apprehended by local law enforcement would be taken to federal custody for deportation. The federal government currently has discretion in that choice.
  • The bill would alter the priority system created by the November 20, 2014 executive action memos and announcement and make deportation nearly mandatory.

The point is to reduce chances of prosecutorial discretion and deferred action, means for unauthorized immigrants to remain in the country. HR 1148 would overturn the Supreme Court’s decision in Arizona v. U.S., which affirmed that states and localities should not be enacting and enforcing their own immigration laws. The House attempted to criminalize unlawful presence in 2005, but that measure did not succeed after massive nonviolent protests throughout the country.

The American Immigrant Lawyers Association has strongly condemned the bill, which is a second attempt of the previously failed “SAFE Act” from 2005. Aside from harmful to American families, businesses, and the economy, it is “fundamentally inconsistent with the principles of due process and fairness grounded in the Constitution.”

 

The post Mass Deportation Bill? appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/mass-deportation-bill/feed/ 0
Judge Stops DAPA and New DACA http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/judge-stops-dapa-new-daca/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/judge-stops-dapa-new-daca/#respond Wed, 18 Feb 2015 18:40:15 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=393 A federal judge in Texas temporarily stopped the expanded DACA and DAPA programs. Today, February 18, 2015, USCIS was supposed to...
Read More

The post Judge Stops DAPA and New DACA appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
A federal judge in Texas temporarily stopped the expanded DACA and DAPA programs. Today, February 18, 2015, USCIS was supposed to begin accepting applications for expanded DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals). DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson issued a press release acknowledging the decision to shut down the two programs temporarily before they even began accepting applications.

 

The lawsuit involved 26 states that argued the Obama Administration had exercised substantive and legislative powers that only belong to the legislative branch. Executive actions pertaining to immigration have been issued by every president since Eisenhower. The government noted that deferral actions have been taken since the 1960s in their brief. The judge agreed with the 26 states, finding unconstitutionality in his order. DHS vows that it will appeal the decision. The Office of Legal Counsel, which serves an advisory role for the executive branch, issued an opinion on November 19, 2014 (the day before the executive actions were announced by President Obama). The opinion advised that DAPA and an expanded DACA program would be legal and within the constitutional powers of the president.

 

The older version of DACA remains in effect and the recipients of DACA are not affected by this decision.

That first version of DACA was not at issue in the lawsuit, though it was tangentially mentioned and criticized. Seeing as over half of the states participated in bringing this lawsuit and the Obama Administration and DHS are planning to appeal, more court battles are expected over the separation of powers, adherence to the Administrative Procedure Act, and DAPA and DACA. The president issued his series of executive orders in November 2014 as a result of congressional inability to pass comprehensive or incremental immigration reform that has been clamored for years. The Senate passed immigration reform in 2013, providing a pathway to citizenship, but that bill did not become law because the House voted against it.

The post Judge Stops DAPA and New DACA appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/judge-stops-dapa-new-daca/feed/ 0
INA in the Supreme Court http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/ina-supreme-court/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/ina-supreme-court/#respond Fri, 16 Jan 2015 21:38:33 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=362 Supreme Court The US Supreme Court on Wednesday heard arguments on whether the government is required to prove a connection...
Read More

The post INA in the Supreme Court appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
Supreme Court

The US Supreme Court on Wednesday heard arguments on whether the government is required to prove a connection between a drug possession conviction and a congressionally defined controlled substance for removal of a permanent resident under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The INA is the immigration law of the land and it allows for removal of non-US citizens for violations pertaining to controlled substances. The case is Mellouli v. Holder. Mellouli is a lawful permanent resident of the US from Tuisia. He was convicted for possession of drug paraphernalia in Kansas, but it is not clear what that substance it is and whether it is controlled or not. Mr. Mellouli argued that the government cannot remove him without proving the connection between the conviction and substance. He was appealing because the US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled that the conviction was covered under the INA.

 

Lawful permanent residents can be removed for any number of reasons. One of the benefits of US citizenship is a safeguard against removal. Permanent residents can be removed for drug convictions, aggravated felonies, among other crimes, even though they have legal status beyond just holding a visa. There are avenues for relief that can be argued for during removal proceedings. Famously, three permanent residents were removed for illicit group membership, despite having families of American citizens and being permanent residents for thirty years.

 

It is unknown when the Supreme Court will release its opinion of Mellouli v. Holder. We will be keeping an eye on this case, as it speaks on the important burden the government has in removing a non-citizen.

The post INA in the Supreme Court appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/ina-supreme-court/feed/ 0
TPS for Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/tps-liberia-guinea-sierra-leone/ http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/tps-liberia-guinea-sierra-leone/#respond Tue, 25 Nov 2014 21:51:16 +0000 http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/?p=345 Department of Homeland Security Announces Temporary Protected Status for Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.   Lost in the immigration news...
Read More

The post TPS for Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
Department of Homeland Security Announces Temporary Protected Status for Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.

USA Flag

 

Lost in the immigration news avalanche of last week, in which President Obama announced executive action for deferred action, business immigration reforms, and enforcement priorities, was the granting of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to nationals of three countries. On November 20, the Department of Homeland Security granted TPS to nationals of Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone, in response to the ebola crisis that is ravaging those nations.

 

Temporary Protected Status means that nationals of those countries (and stateless people who last habitually resided there) will not be removed from the United States and will have work authorization, effective November 21, 2014. The grant lasts for 18 months (May 2016). Not all nationals are automatically eligible. Nationals must pass a criminal background check and cannot be national security threats. There is a 180 day registration period. An applicant must show that he or she has been continuously residing in the United States since November 20, 2014 and has been continuously physically present in the United States since November 21, 2014. The date requirements are strict. Nationals cannot start arriving from those countries and request TPS. It is a very limited grant of status – it is nothing like asylum status or a green card – but it is often a necessary protection for individuals fleeing civil war, disease, natural disasters, and awful country conditions,

 

Other countries currently with Temporary Protected Status include El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, and Syria.

 

If you have any questions about your eligibility for Temporary Protected Status or would like assistance, please contact immigration attorney Andrew Wood.

The post TPS for Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone appeared first on Wood Immigration Law.

]]>
http://woodimmigrationlaw.com/industry-news/tps-liberia-guinea-sierra-leone/feed/ 0