Illegals On The Run From Law PDF
Illegals On The Run From Law PDF
Illegals On The Run From Law PDF
April 2014
C I S
case now working its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, Lopez-Valenzuela v. Maricopa County, pits the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) against Arizona and its mandatory detention of accused felons who are also
illegally present in the United States. This practice, claims the ACLU, is unconstitutional.
Intended to prevent flight from prosecution, the measure makes it more likely offenders will stand trial and, if
convicted, will eventually be deported. Approved by Arizona voters in 2006, the law reflects a standard frustration
with broken federal promises to secure borders and enforce removal orders. This same frustration mirrors both
the aspiration and the gridlock in Congress over immigration reform.
Urging the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn the measure, the ACLU asserted no empirical data
show those illegally present are a greater flight risk than any other group. Its unfair, it argued, to subject [illegal
immigrants] to rules that dont apply to everyone else. Some fact checking is appropriate.
Indeed, immigrant offenders often fail to follow the rules that is, attend court like everyone else. Immigration
court records from 1996 through 2012 show 76 percent of 1.1 million deportation orders were issued against
those who evaded court.1 These evasions compose the greatest source of unexecuted deportation orders in the
immigration court system. Not even a quarter of those free pending trial some 268,000 actually came to
court and finished their cases. By contrast, accused felons in Americas state courts those also free pending trial
seldom missed; only 24 percent according to a 2007 Justice Department study.2
Notably, those persons detained pending trial produced wholly different results. Over the same 17-year period,
immigration courts handed down 2.7 million removal orders 60 percent of them, or 1.6 million in detention
facilities.3 Up to 96 percent of these removal orders, records say, were actually executed.4 With flight not an option,
detainees were removed at their cases completion. When not detained, results were predictable.
Not only did many flee court, but seldom were they re-arrested. ICE reported its highest fugitive re-arrest numbers in 2008, when agents apprehended a total of 34,000 people, or 6 percent, from a fugitive population of
592,000. Since then, ICE has abandoned its immigration fugitive program and fugitives have increased 51 percent
to just under 842,000.5 History provides context.
A 1989 GAO report found that Aliens have nothing to lose by failing to appear for hearings and, in effect, ignoring the deportation process.6 This disregard, the study concluded, stemmed from a general lack of repercussions because few ordered removed are ever deported. Numbers and narratives tell the story.7
A 2005 Justice Department investigation confirmed only 3 percent of the non-detained were actually removed
after unfavorable court rulings.8 Laments Judge Edward Grant of the immigration appeals court: All should be
Mark H. Metcalf is a former judge on the immigration court in Miami, Fla. Under President George W. Bush he
served in several posts at the Justice and Defense Departments.
1629 K Street, NW, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20006 (202) 466-8185
[email protected]
www.cis.org
1
Phone 202.466.8185
Fax 202.466.8076
www.cis.org
End Notes
From 1996 through 2012, trial courts issued removal orders in 2,738,642 cases. Of this total, 1,629,062 (60 percent) of all
orders were issued against aliens in detention facilities. The balance of removal orders (1,109,580) were issued against aliens
free pending trial. Removal orders were issued against 841,391 aliens who failed to appear in court. Put another way, 76 percent of all removal orders against those the United States allowed to remain free pending trial come from those who failed
to keep their court dates. See EOIR 2000 Year Book, p. I3, Table 12; p. L1-L2, Figures 15-17; and p. T1, Figure 23; EOIR 2004
Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 20; EOIR 2008 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4,
Figures 1012, and p. O1, Figure 23; EOIR 2009 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 23,
EOIR 2012 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 23.
1
Thomas H. Cohen and Brian A. Reaves, Pretrial Release of Felony Defendants in State Courts, BJS Special Report, Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, November 2007, pp.1, 8, and 10. Write the authors: For failure to appear, the
range was from 21 percent to 24 percent [of accused felons who were released pending trial] Overall rearrest rates ranged
from 13 percent to 21 percent; and [b]etween 1990 and 2004, 62 percent of felony defendants in State courts in the 75
largest counties were released prior to the disposition of their case. When determining failure to appear rates, the authors
compared those accused felons released prior to trial who failed to appear in court out of the total population of accused
felons who were released pending trial. The number-crunchers at the immigration courts could learn a thing or two from
these researchers.
2
From 1996 through 2012, trial courts issued removal orders in 2,738,642 cases. Of this total, 1,629,062 or 60 percent of all
orders were issued against aliens in detention facilities. The balance of removal orders 1,109,580 were issued against
aliens free pending trial. Removal orders were issued against 841,391 aliens who failed to appear in court. Put another way,
76 percent of all removal orders against those the United States allowed to remain free pending trial come from those who
failed to keep their court dates. See EOIR 2000 Year Book, p. I3, Table12, p. L1-L2, Figures 15-17, and p. T1, Figure 23; EOIR
2004 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 20; EOIR 2008 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 23; EOIR 2009 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure
23; EOIR 2012 Year Book, p. D2, Figure 5, p. H1-H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 23.
3
Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department of Justice, The Immigration and Naturalization Services Removal of
Aliens Issued Final Orders, Report Number I-2003-004, February 2003. Said the report: We found that the INS removed 92
percent (46 of 50) of the detained aliens from the United States.See also EOIR 2008 Year Book, p. P2, Table 13. Decisions by
judges in penal institutions in 2008 resulted in 95.7 percent (5372 out of 5613) of aliens ordered removed at completion of
their sentences. States the annual report: The goal of the IHP (Institutional Hearing Program) is to complete proceedings
for incarcerated criminal aliens serving federal or state sentences prior to their release from prison or jail. This allows DHS
to remove aliens with final removal orders expeditiously at the time of their release from incarceration.
4
ICE Fiscal Year 2008 Annual Report, p.4. At the end of 2008, there were 557,762 such [open fugitive] cases remaining. ICE
has not reported its removal records for fugitive aliens since 2008. Its August 17, 2009 announcement that it would not remove aliens who skipped court or disobeyed orders to depart the United States has caused an increase in unexecuted removal
orders that builds on the 557,762 orders disclosed in 2008. (Fugitive aliens now equal 841,391; See footnote 1.) See Anna
Gorman, Immigration Official Says Agents Will No Longer Have To Meet Quotas, Los Angeles Times, August 18, 2009.
5
Immigration Control: Deporting and Excluding Aliens from the United States, pp. 1, 22, and 31, U.S. General Accounting
Office, GAO/GGD-90-18, October 1989. States the GAO: [T]heir [aliens] non-appearance may also be due partly to the
general lack of repercussions ... for failing to appear.
6
Ibid.
Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department of Justice, The Immigration and Naturalization Services Removal of
Aliens Issued Final Orders, Rep. No. I-2003-004, February 2003. States the report: [W]e examined three important subgroups of nondetained aliens and found that the INS was also ineffective at removing potential high-risk groups of nondetained aliens. The subgroups we examined were aliens: from countries that the U.S. Department of State identified as
8
Stephen Dinan, Deportations Come Mostly From Border, DHS Chief Says, the Washington Times, March 12, 2014: Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnsonacknowledged Tuesday that his departments deportation numbers are now mostly made
up of illegal immigrants caught at the border, not just those from the interior, which means they cant be compared one-toone with deportations under President Bush or other prior administrations.
10
John F. Simanski and Leslie M. Sapp, Annual Report, Immigration Enforcement Actions 2012, Department of Homeland
Security, Office of Immigration Statistics. The report found the number of aliens removed in 2012 totaled 419,384 in 2012.
Nearly half of these removals (199,000) came from criminal aliens.
11
8 U.S. Code 1231(a)(1)(A) Detention and removal of aliens ordered removed. Except as otherwise provided in this section, when an alien is ordered removed, the Attorney General shall remove the alien from the United States within a period
of 90 days.
12
Alexander Bolton, DHS Document: 68,000 Illegal Immigrants With Criminal Convictions Released In 2013, The Hill,
March 31, 2014.
13
Office of the Inspector General, Department of Homeland Security, Detention and Removal of Illegal Aliens, Audit
Report OIG-06-33, p. 9, April 2006. States the report: From FY 2001 through the first half of FY 2005, 91,516 SIC (special
interest countries regarding terrorism) and SST (state sponsors of terrorism) aliens were apprehended, of which 45,000 (49
percent) were later released. It is not known exactly how many of these SIC and SST aliens were ultimately issued final orders
of removal and were actually removed since such data is not tracked by DRO. However, assuming SIC and SST aliens are
being removed at the same rate as other apprehended and released aliens, 85 percent of the SIC and SST aliens released who
eventually receive final orders of removal will abscond.
14
15
Bob Hennelly and Stephen Nessen, Lone Wolves Arrested in Alleged NYC Terror Plot, WNYC News, May 12, 2011.
16
Matthew Barakat, Man Charged With 3 Counts of Murder In Va. Attacks, Associated Press, February 11, 2011.
17
South Florida Murder Case Closed Because Suspect Died, Associated Press, January 11, 2012.
See Department of Justice, FY 2014 Congressional Budget Submission, Administrative Review and Appeals. The submission of the Obama Justice Department uses the same language of the Bush Justice Department: The fight against terrorism
remains the top enforcement priority of the Department of Justice and the administration. A key component of this effort is
the securing of our nations borders. More than ever, protecting America requires a multifaceted strategy that must include
the effective coordination of investigative, enforcement, legal and adjudicative resources, both within the department and
in concert with other agencies. The application and enforcement of our immigration laws remain a critical element of this
national effort.
18
19
See Department of Justice, FY 2008 Congressional Budget Submission, Administrative Review and Appeals.
See Department of Justice, FY 2011 Budget and Performance Summary, Overview, p. 3. States the summary: The department maintains substantial responsibilities with respect to immigration, including enforcement, detention, judicial functions, administrative hearings, and litigation, among others. The departments Executive Office for Immigration Review
(EOIR, the agency that manages the courts) serves as the frontline presence nationwide in immigration matters.
21
22
Coyotes are persons who guide foreign nationals across the U.S. border with Mexico. Those guided are referred to in
Spanish as pollos (chickens).
Steven A. Camarota, The Open Door: How Islamic Terrorists Entered and Remained in the United States, 1993-2001,
Center for Immigration Studies Backgrounder, 2002, p. 59.
23
Between 2002 and 2006, 360,199 out of 713,974 non-detained aliens failed to keep their court dates, a total of 50.4 percent.
See EOIR 2006 Year Book, pp. H1-H4, Figures 10-12 and p. O1, Figure 20.
24
See EOIR 2008 Year Book, pp. H1- H4, Figures 10-12, and p. O1, Figure 23. Using the five-year composite in the 2008 year
book shows EOIR repeated its earlier finding that 39 percent of aliens failed to appear in court 2005. In fact, 59 percent were
no-shows. In 2006, EOIR once more reported 39 percent of aliens made no court appearance. The real number was, again,
59 percent.
25
Margaret E. Martin, Miron L Straf, and Constance F. Citro, eds., Principles and Practices for A Federal Statistical Agency, 3rd
ed., National Academies Press, 2005, p.3.
26
In Chapters from My Autobiography, Mark Twain confessed confusion: Figures often beguile me, particularly when I have
the arranging of them myself; in which case the remark attributed to [British Prime Minister Benjamin] Disraeli would often
apply with justice and force: There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
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