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Blog: Think Immigration

We believe that immigration law is an integral part of America’s past, present and future. We also know that immigration law is complicated. Here you’ll find experts writing in an accessible way about immigration issues, from big, broad ideas down to specific cases. Our members bring knowledge they’ve gleaned from the daily practice of immigration law to this space and offer their expertise to readers.

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AILA Blog

Preconceived Notions Shattered by Dilley

Recently, Rochelle G. volunteered at the Dilley facility where nearly 2,000 mothers and children are incarcerated despite their status as asylum-seekers. Brian Hoffman, lead attorney for the CARA Family Detention Pro Bono Project which brings volunteers from all over the nation to help in this remot

AILA Blog

The Global Team Effort that Freed a Mother and Child

Last Wednesday, July 3rd, a client from El Salvador won her merits hearing! I appeared with attorney Melisa Peña from Miami over video conference, while Elora Mukherjee appeared by telephone from Tokyo, Japan and John Bradley appeared, sitting next to the client, from Dilley, TX. Thank you to everyo

AILA Blog

A Lot of Glass in Those Towers, Any Mirrors?

Antonio Olivio of the Washington Post hit the nail on the head in his July 6th column (At Trump hotel site, immigrant workers wary) regarding the building of the new Trump luxury hotel in Washington DC.  Ever since Donald Trump made his ill-informed and untrue statements about Mexican and Latino imm

7/8/15
AILA Blog

LGBT Detention Must End

On June 23, 2015, 35 members of the House of Representatives wrote to Secretary Johnson, calling on the Obama Administration to end the detention of LGBT immigrants in ICE custody, especially transgender women.[1] The letter requested the administration seek parole and alternatives to detention for

7/1/15 LGBTQ
AILA Blog

A Long Journey for Justice: the Continuing Fight for LGBT Immigrants

As the nation rejoiced after the Supreme Court ruling on Obergefell v. Hodges, I recalled the celebrations at AILA's 2013 annual conference in San Francisco on the day that the Supreme Court decided Windsor v. Connecticut.   Windsor and subsequent Department of Homeland Security (DHS) directives mad

6/30/15 LGBTQ
AILA Blog

A Call to Arms

(With thanks to Sir Winston Churchill) Last week, I spoke with some of our government contacts about the changes that are on the very near horizon here in Dilley. Due, I imagine, to the Congressional visit, DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson's announcement, and the Flores litigation, the asylum office will r

AILA Blog

Little By Little, We Tear Down the Walls of Family Detention

In June of 2014, the first and most remote Family Detention Center opened in Artesia.  The move was a concerted effort by the Administration to deter the influx of mothers and children and unaccompanied minors from Central America fleeing violence, persecution and despair.  The Administration's prem

AILA Blog

A Look Back to Artesia, and a Look into Karnes: Part 7

As the clock ticked toward mid-June, ICE quietly hinted that the agency would be reviewing the long-term custody status of detained families at Dilley and Karnes, although ICE would not share the criteria that they intended to apply in the review process.  Yet in recent conversations with E-, she re

AILA Blog

One Less Brick in the Wall, Mata v. Lynch

We would like to thank AILA for approaching us to give our thoughts on our recent Supreme Court win in Reyes Mata v. Lynch, 576 U.S.___ (2015). We met Mr. Mata in October of 2012.  Probably the most outstanding thing about his situation was how typical it was.  Like so many of our clients, he [̷

AILA Blog

H-1B Cap Slows U.S. Innovation

The Fiscal Year 2016 H-1B random selection process for skilled workers is over.  As with many other immigration lawyers around the country, I am dealing with employer fallout over the loss of badly needed skilled professionals whose petitions weren't selected.  Many of these would-be H-1B beneficiar

AILA Blog

Finally Free from Fear

B- and her six-year-old daughter just received a gift of immeasurable value: the gift of safety, of security, of freedom from fear. They had been through torment the likes of which I hope no one ever faces, but they made it through and I was privileged to help them. B- is a survivor of childhood [&#

AILA Blog

Life or Death Consequences: Part 2

Read Part 1 of this blog post. The story continues… A few days later, I got a desperate email from our local staff:  we only had two volunteers lined up for the next week.  Worse yet, one lawyer was only available for three days and the other didn't speak Spanish.  Continuity was critical:  we

AILA Blog

Life or Death Consequences: Part 1

I wasn't going to do it.  It was just crazy stupid.  We didn't have the resources.  The hearing was in 20 hours, and that just wasn't enough time to put a case together. And yet, knowing that there were life or death consequences, how could I tell the young mother and little boy sitting in […]

AILA Blog

A Failed Hail Mary

A profound moment in immigration history is upon us.  Through change in administrative rules, certain H-4 visa holders were able to begin applying for work authorization on May 26.  This privilege did not come about easily. Activists, including H-4 spouses themselves, fought long and hard for it. Wh

AILA Blog

There’s Something Happening Here

I haven't heard immigration lawyers called heroes many times before (though I know a lot who are). And I'm pretty sure it's the first time I've ever heard it from a sitting member of Congress. But that's what happened Thursday when Congressman Beto O'Rourke (D-TX) said that AILA member Dree Collopy

AILA Blog

Answering Questions from the Community

Monday night, the Princeton, New Jersey Human Services Commission hosted a program addressing President Obama's Executive Order on DACA and DAPA.  The Princeton community has been out in front building bridges with immigrants that live in the municipality. The DACA/DAPA event was the most recent in

5/20/15 DACA
AILA Blog

Understanding the Mindset

On May 5 and 6, 2015, Ryan Hutton and Rafael Henry from Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Headquarters invited a group of AILA members to attend a southern border tour in Texas. On the first day, we visited the land border crossing at the Hidalgo Port of Entry, and on the second day we visited [&#

AILA Blog

Approaching Liberty

It was some months ago, which seems like yesterday, that volunteers representing the detained children and women in Artesia, New Mexico, were confronted with immigration judges in Arlington, Virgina who said no. There were hearings before one Immigration Judge who would go on and on and on about nat

AILA Blog

Game Changer

During a recent campaign event in Nevada, Hillary Clinton blindsided the 2016 Presidential contestants by stating her unequivocal support for comprehensive immigration reform (CIR) and a clear path to citizenship for the undocumented migrants in the U.S. She also stated the obvious - that when immig

5/14/15
AILA Blog

Another Kind of Obstacle Course

Interesting piece by Kristina Wong in The Hill last week (Army already enlisting ‘Dreamers' as Congress debates immigration) about 50 DACA recipients (“illegal immigrants“ as the author calls them) joining the United States military. The US military has long tapped skilled people to join its r

5/13/15 DACA
AILA Blog

Segura

Driving out of the Dilley detention center last Friday, an awareness hung over me as certain and cloudy as the sky itself. I'd just spent the week volunteering with the CARA Family Detention Pro Bono Project. As we pulled onto I-35 towards San Antonio, I scanned the open road and considered that mos

AILA Blog

Accessing Justice Requires a Guide

The three-year-old boy was a charmer, no question, so it was disorienting to encounter him in a detention facility in Texas. He loved being pushed in a stroller by his 19-year old mother, barely out of childhood herself. How did they get there? D- is an indigenous woman who married very young in Gua

AILA Blog

A Look Back to Artesia, and a Look into Karnes: Part 6

I last visited E- on Saturday, May 2nd; sadly, we met again at Karnes, the scene of all prior visits.  It was, I think, our twelfth meeting, and our first since the IJ's oral decision back on April 13th.  E- was initially crushed by the decision, to the point where she couldn't bear the thought [

AILA Blog

Borderland Preservation or Destruction?

If you can look past the ugly politics in Arizona, it is truly a beautiful place to live and work. I have resided in Tucson, Arizona, for most of my life and there are times when I'll be driving, hiking or running in the surrounding wilderness and the scenery is breathtaking. The saguaro cactus, the

5/7/15
AILA Blog

Punch Line Material

Three cheers to Daniel M. Gerstein and Martina L. Melliand for their story (The forgotten cornerstone in the immigration reform debate) in The Hill yesterday regarding the forgotten child in the immigration reform debate: the immigration court. We hear endless stories about increased funding for ICE