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Immigration
Judges Face Increased Scrutiny
By Marisa Taylor
McClatchy Newspapers
The Miami Herald
Jun. 28, 2006
WASHINGTON - After Islamic militants murdered Seemab Shah's father,
she said, they came for her. Terrified, Shah left her newborn son in
the care of relatives and fled Pakistan for the United States.
She beseeched a U.S.
immigration judge to grant her asylum. As proof of the danger to her
family, she presented the court with her father's death certificate
and newspaper photos of him lying in a pool of blood.
Despite the evidence, Judge
Donald Ferlise concluded that Shah's father wasn't dead. Rejecting
Shah's story as "totally incredible," he denied her request to
remain in the United States.
But Shah, 33, isn't going
home anytime soon. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
Philadelphia concluded that Ferlise inexplicably had ignored
undisputed evidence of her father's death. The court reversed his
decision and ordered another judge to hear the case. In May, Ferlise
was removed from hearing cases.
Ferlise's ruling and
similar decisions by other immigration judges have come under
intense scrutiny by federal appeals courts. A review by McClatchy
Newspapers has found that appeals courts have sent back dozens of
rulings by immigration judges over the last two years, calling many
of them biased and unjust. In one recent rebuke, an appeals court
panel deemed an asylum decision "incomprehensible." Another panel
called an immigration ruling "pure supposition."
The appeals courts also
have singled out judges for what they've called rude and bullying
behavior. One appeals court panel reversed a decision because, it
said, the judge acted like a "prosecutor anxious to pick holes" in
immigrants' stories instead of an impartial jurist.
The appeals-court judges'
unusually sharp tone has prompted calls for an overhaul of the
immigration courts, the forum of last resort for many of the world's
refugees who flee to the United States from repressive governments
that may have tortured and imprisoned them for their beliefs.
Responding to the
criticism, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales launched a review of
the immigration courts in January. Gonzales, who oversees the
immigration judges, is expected to make recommendations in the next
few months on how to improve the court system.
"The attorney general has
stressed he believes that most immigration judges perform their
duties admirably and professionally," said a senior Justice
Department official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the
review isn't complete. "But given the number of complaints he heard,
he wanted to assess the scope and the nature of whatever problem
might exist."
Immigration judges said the
criticism was overblown because the federal circuit courts upheld
the vast majority of their rulings.
The judges think the
scrutiny stems from a profound misunderstanding of the pressures on
their courts.
A judge could jeopardize
the nation's security by allowing the wrong person to remain in the
United States. But rejecting a valid asylum request can send a
refugee back to a country in which he or she would face torture,
imprisonment - or death.
"It can be the equivalent
of imposing a death sentence," said Dana Leigh Marks, an immigration
judge and the vice president of the National Association of
Immigration Judges.
However, immigration judges
often are forced to depend on the testimony of a single witness: the
immigrant. Documents that might support a story can be sparse
because many immigrants can't return to their homelands to collect
proof. Some immigrants take advantage of the low threshold of
evidence and lie about their circumstances, law enforcement
officials said.
Although so much hinges on
their testimony, immigrants often tell their stories through
interpreters, who may or may not be qualified. Unlike federal court,
many testify without being represented by attorneys.
"The immigration court is a
bizarre Frankenstein-like creature," said Chris Carlson, an
immigration lawyer in Minneapolis. "When we walk into federal court,
it's like a breath of fresh air. We're treated with respect, legal
arguments are made and the laws applied."
To make matters worse,
immigration judges say they're overwhelmed by a growing crush of
cases.
Last year, the more than
200 immigration judges handled roughly 300,000 immigration matters.
To keep up, a single judge has to complete 1,400 cases a year, or
nearly 27 a week. As a result, some immigrants wait as long as a
year to appear before judges.
The judges don't have a
computerized system to record their decisions, and often are forced
to rule from the bench without extensive preparation or the benefit
of transcripts. Unlike federal jurists, they don't have bailiffs or
law clerks and are virtually powerless to punish uncooperative
lawyers or witnesses.
Forced to cut back on
expenses, the judges have gone without personalized training for
three years, though immigration requirements are considered as
arcane and complex as tax law.
"Given the volume of cases,
you walk out of court often stressed out because you don't have
enough time or angered because you have been forced to make a
decision that you personally don't believe is right," said Joe Vail,
a former Houston immigration judge who resigned in 1999 out of
frustration.
Judges can become jaded and
desensitized by the blur of tragic tales: rape, torture, murder.
"Everybody is saying to
you, `My country is a horrible place,'" Vail said. "There are judges
who are sitting there day after day hearing those claims, and they
get tired and burned out and they stop believing the stories."
But some lawyers said the
Justice Department hadn't done a good job of disciplining judges who
verbally attacked immigrants or lawyers or who handed down decisions
without legal basis.
In the last 10 years, about
140 complaints have been filed against immigration judges, but only
two judges have been removed and two others reassigned. Justice
Department officials said a more precise breakdown of complaints
wasn't available.
The same day that the 3rd
Circuit appeals court in Philadelphia reversed Ferlise's decision in
Shah's case, the judges found fault with another of his rulings.
Abou Cham, a West African
refugee, said he'd be killed if he were sent back to his homeland.
Cham testified that his uncle had been ousted as president of his
country in a coup. He described fleeing after members of the new
regime killed and imprisoned several other relatives.
From the outset, Ferlise
appeared not to believe the refugee, and interrupted his testimony
numerous times, the appeals court found.
"Under the `bullying'
nature of the immigration judge's questioning," Cham "was ground to
bits," appellate Judge Maryanne Trump Barry wrote.
"It is crystal clear that
Judge Ferlise presumed Cham's application to be without merit before
even a shred of testimony had been presented, and treated Cham
accordingly."
Barry described Ferlise's
ruling as a "severe wound" inflicted on the American system of
justice, when "not a modicum of courtesy, of respect or of any
pretense of fairness is extended."
Ferlise didn't return phone
calls requesting comment. Some lawyers who'd appeared before him
said he was being singled out unfairly because of the recent
reversals, which they said didn't reflect the thousands of cases
he'd heard in his 11 years on the bench.
"There are worse judges
than Judge Ferlise," said Kent Frederick, the chief counsel who
oversees the government's immigration lawyers in Philadelphia.
"Maybe he's intemperate at times, but it certainly is not a pattern
of behavior."
But other lawyers said the
problem wasn't simply a matter of rude judges but of unjust
decisions.
"At the end of the day, if
someone screams and yells and comes up with a fair ruling you accept
it," said David Piver, Shah's attorney. "But if they scream and yell
and come out with a ruling that is indefensible, the system isn't
working."
Lawyers interviewed during
the attorney general's review have told the Justice Department that
certain courts won't improve unless specific judges are reassigned
or removed.
"There are a lot of good
judges, but there are also some really bad judges," said Scott
Bratton, an immigration lawyer in Ohio who appears in courts across
the country. "There are definitely judges who you know have their
minds made up before they hear a case and they think your client is
lying no matter what they say."
The problem isn't contained
to judges who reject asylum requests, said Frederick, the chief
counsel in Philadelphia.
Some judges who are
sympathetic to immigrants also don't belong on the bench, but simply
haven't come to the attention of the appeals courts, he said. Unlike
immigrants' attorneys, government lawyers can't appeal to the
federal courts.
"The problem is on both
extremes," Frederick said. "There also has been some really terrible
behavior by judges who grant the requests in favor of the aliens."
Critics say the Board of
Immigration Appeals, the panel set up to review the judges'
decisions, isn't aggressive enough about scrutinizing rulings
because of changes made to its powers four years ago.
In 2002, then-Attorney
General John Ashcroft reduced the board to 12 judges from 23, and
expanded the ability of any one of them to decide appeals without
explanation. The Justice Department credits the overhaul for
reducing a backlog of thousands of frivolous appeals.
But immigration lawyers
said the board wasn't reviewing the immigration judges' decisions as
closely as before. As a result, the lawyers said, they're forced to
appeal more often to the federal courts. Their appeals of the
immigration board's decisions increased from about 1,600 in 2001 to
12,800 in 2005, a more than sevenfold spike.
"The courts are having the
opportunity to look at immigrant judges and see what's going on in
the hearings," Miami immigration lawyer Tammy Fox-Isicoff said.
"You're seeing decisions from circuit judges that show shock."
In one recent case, a panel
of judges for the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago
called attention to some immigration judges' lack of familiarity
with foreign cultures, insensitivity to misunderstandings caused by
the translation of testimony and "unhelpful, boilerplate" decisions
by the Board of Immigration Appeals.
"It is possible that
nothing better can realistically be expected than what we are
seeing," appellate Judge Richard Posner wrote in the opinion. " . .
. But we are not authorized to affirm unreasoned decisions even when
we understand why they are unreasoned."
McClatchy Washington bureau
researcher Tish Wells and Casey Woods of The Miami Herald
contributed to this article.
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