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Post by avordvet on Jun 15, 2017 4:46:43 GMT -5
Court orders DHS to reinstate amnesty for Georgia DreamerBy Stephen Dinan - The Washington Times - Monday, June 12, 2017 A federal judge ordered Homeland Security Monday to reinstate an amnesty for a Dreamer and blasted the government for “running roughshod” over a young woman in a ruling that breaks new ground in legal rights for illegal immigrants. Judge Mark H. Cohen ruled that the department didn’t follow its own procedures when it stripped Jessica Colotl of her status under President Obama’s 2012 amnesty, known in government-speak as DACA. The judge ordered her deportation amnesty and her work permit be kept in place, and sent U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services — the Homeland Security agency that handles applications — back to consider Ms. Colotl’s case again. “The public has an interest in government agencies being required to comply with their own written guidelines instead of engaging in arbitrary decision making,” Judge Cohen said. When the Obama administration established the program it said DACA was entirely at the discretion of Homeland Security, and could be revoked. www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/jun/12/court-orders-dhs-reinstate-amnesty-georgia-dreamer/
And here's the oath breaking POS ObamaBot traitor that did it... openjurist.org/judge/mark-howard-cohen
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Post by avordvet on Jun 15, 2017 5:11:59 GMT -5
The Courts are the ones causing the 'backlogs' through their unconstitutional actions... Cloward and Piven at work... Immigration Court Backlog: Time to Complete a Deportation Hearing Increased by 700%By Mark Browne, June 14, 2017 7:34 PM EDT Mexico City (CNSNews.com) – Experts are blaming the U.S. Supreme Court, Obama-era policies, a surge in illegal immigrant children, a hiring freeze on judges and an uptick in asylum requests for a doubling in the backlog of cases pending at immigration courts in the U.S. The backlog is so great, some courts are scheduling cases years into the future, according to a report this month by the government’s General Accounting Office (GAO). Findings by the report included: --a more than doubling in the number of backlogged cases from 212,000 in fiscal year 2006 and to 437,000 in fiscal year 2015; --a 25 percent decline in the number of cases ending in deportation during the same period, from 77 percent of completed cases in 2006 to 52 percent in 2015; --a 700 percent increase in the time judges take to compete a deportation proceeding, from 42 days in 2006 to 336 days in 2015. The report also found that while the number of immigration judges increased during the period covered, the number of cases completed declined annually – “which resulted in a lower number of case completions per immigration judge at the end of the 10-year period.” Finally, the report said that the time it took to complete an immigration case shot up “more than fivefold” during the period studied. www.cnsnews.com/news/article/mark-browne/immigration-court-backlog-time-taken-complete-deportation-hearing-increased
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