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Backlog of Immigration Cases Continues

The President announced a temporary end to the partial government shutdown on Friday, which should help morale among the nationā€™s 400 immigration judges.  They were watching dockets, already a nightmare, get worse as many worked without pay and some sat at home for a month.  Now that the government is assured of remaining open for at least a few weeks the judges can get back to tackling the backlog, but theyā€™re not going to be able to solve the problem.

There are major flaws in the system, immigration judge Mark Metcalf tells KTRH News.  ā€œYou address those defects by, one ā€“ getting more judges.  The other way you fix it is by insisting on border security so you add to the backlog with more cases.ā€

As of November 30 last year, the backlog was at more than 800,000 cases, and is expected to cross the seven-digit mark next month. 

Metcalf says when Presdeint George W. Bush left office there were 186,000 cases waiting to be heard, but after Presidents Obama and Trumpā€™s first two years the number has grown exponentially.  With the present docket sizes and the backlog he says weā€™re probably already across the one million mark in backlogs.

 Metcalf says among those hurt by a poorly functioning system are those people who followed the rules and are in the process of applying for immigration papers, but could find themselves behind illegals.  ā€œThey could jump ahead of those who patiently waited for the same things that the illegal entrant is trying to take by coming to the United States without permission,ā€ says Metcalf.


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