Featured Issue: U.S. Immigration Courts under Trump 2.0
The U.S. immigration court system plays a critical role in upholding due process and ensuring fair hearings for individuals facing deportation. However, since January 20, 2025, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has implemented significant changes that challenge the structural integrity of these courts. This page aims to provide up-to-date information on the policy and legal shifts affecting the U.S. immigration court system.
Latest Updates
Updates from EOIR
Browse the Featured Issue: U.S. Immigration Courts under Trump 2.0 collection
CA1 Finds Petitioner Who Experienced Harassment from Gang Members in El Salvador Failed to Show Membership in Valid PSG
The court concluded that the petitioner’s claimed particular social groups (PSGs)— “young person who has been beaten and threatened by gangs” and “young individual in the country who’s been targeted for gang recruitment” —were not cognizable. (Ramos-Gutierrez v. Garland, 7/18/24)
CA1 Remands Withholding of Removal Claim of Petitioner Who Fled Liberia as a Child During Civil War
The court held that the BIA and IJ had failed to address whether the petitioner’s childhood escape from Liberia because of systematic ethnic cleansing and genocide of the Krahn people during the Liberian civil war constituted past persecution. (Paye v. Garland, 7/17/24)
CA2 Upholds Asylum Denial to Nepalese Petitioner Who Received Death Threats from Maiost Partisans
The court held that death threats are not per se indicative of past persecution, and found that the death threats directed at the petitioner were not sufficiently imminent, concrete, or menacing so as to constitute past persecution under the case-by-case approach. (KC v. Garland, 7/17/24)
CA2 Finds That IJ and BIA Properly Admitted Form I-213 into Evidence as Reliable Document
The court held that the IJ and BIA properly considered the Form I-213 prepared by immigration officials, because it was presumptively reliable and capable of proving alienage by clear and convincing evidence, and the petitioner did not rebut that presumption. (Vera Punin v. Garland, 7/16/24)
CA4 Finds Petitioner Was Not Eligible for Cancellation of Removal Based on His Conviction for Soliciting Prostitution in Virginia
The court held that petitioner’s conviction for soliciting prostitution in Virginia was a crime involving moral turpitude (CIMT), and thus that petitioner was ineligible for cancellation of removal pursuant to INA §240A(b)(1) based on his prior conviction. (Ortega-Cordova v. Garland, 7/16/24)
CA8 Upholds Asylum Denial Where Petitioner Claimed Past Persecution Based on Her Daughter’s Medical Treatment in Guatemala
The court upheld the BIA’s conclusion that the petitioner had not established past persecution, where she alleged that she was persecuted by hospital staff at a government-run hospital in Guatemala where she would take her daughter, who had a genetic disorder. (Calvo-Tino v. Garland, 7/12/24)
CA11 Upholds Denial of Yemeni Petitioner’s Request for Administrative Closure or Continuance
The court found that it lacked jurisdiction over the BIA’s denial of the petitioner’s motion to remand, and concluded that the BIA did not abuse its discretion in denying his request for an administrative closure or a continuance. (Alkotof v. Att’y Gen., 7/12/24)
CA9 Finds That Petitioner’s Nevada Conviction for Attempted Lewdness with Child under 14 Constitutes Attempted Aggravated Felony
The court held that the offense of attempted lewdness with a child under the age of 14, in violation of Nev. Rev. Stat. §§193.330 and 201.230(2), constitutes an attempted sexual abuse of a minor aggravated felony that rendered the petitioner removable. (Leon Perez v. Garland, 6/28/24)
CA11 Finds That Petitioner Was Properly Ordered Removed in Absentia Where She Provided an Erroneous Address and Failed to Correct It
The court held that because the petitioner had provided the government with an inaccurate address at which she could be reached and failed to correct it, immigration officials were excused from providing her notice of her removal hearing. (Rosales-Mendez v. Att’y Gen., 6/20/24)
CA2 Finds Petitioner’s Ground of Removal Was Insufficiently Related to His Marriage Fraud to Support INA §237(a)(1)(H) Waiver
The court upheld the BIA’s determination that petitioner could not invoke INA §237(a)(1)(H)’s fraud waiver to waive his charge of removability, because his conditional permanent resident status terminated automatically due to his failure to submit a joint petition. (Bador v. Garland, 7/11/24)
Policy Brief: Ending the Reign of Lozada and Removing Barriers to Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims in Immigration Law
People rely on attorneys during stressful times, and ineffective assistance of counsel can have severe consequences. AILA provides a policy brief on how the Lozada standard burdens immigrants and attorneys in their effort to pursue justice when IAC occurs in removal proceedings.
CA3 Holds That Time Spent in Pretrial Detention Is Confinement as a Result of Conviction under the INA
The court held that pre-conviction detention credited toward a defendant’s sentence is confinement “as a result of conviction” under INA §101(f)(7), thus precluding a finding of good moral character under the cancellation of removal statute. (Aguilar v. Att’y Gen., 7/10/24)
CA8 Remands Asylum Claim of Pastor of Christian Church in El Salvador Who Was Targeted by MS-13 Gang Members
The court held that the BIA and IJ failed to conduct the required careful examination of the record to determine whether religion may have been one of multiple central reasons for the gang members’ persecution of the petitioner in El Salvador. (Rivera v. Garland, 7/5/24)
AILA and the Council Submit Comment on the Secure the Border Interim Final Rule
AILA and the American Immigration Council submitted a comment to DHS and DOJ's Interim Final Rule titled, Securing the Border, stating that, "AILA and the Council oppose the interim regulations because they will return vulnerable individuals who deserve protection from danger and potential death."
EOIR Launches Respondent Access Portal Furthering the Access EOIR Initiative
EOIR announced the launch of Respondent Access Portal, a secure online platform that allows unrepresented individuals who have a hearing scheduled to view their case information and scheduled hearings online, download their electronic case file, and file documents with the immigration court.
CA9 Holds That California Carjacking Is Not a Crime of Violence under INA §101(a)(43)(F)
The court concluded that a conviction for carjacking in California under Cal. Pen. Code §215(a) was not a categorical crime of violence, and that the BIA erroneously determined that the petitioner had waived his challenge to the moral turpitude removal charge. (Gutierrez v. Garland, 7/2/24)
CA1 Finds That Guatemalan Petitioner’s Proposed PSG of “Climate Refugee” Was Not Legally Cognizable
The court held that the BIA did not err in finding that petitioner had failed to show that his proposed particular social group (PSG)—“climate refugee”—was legally cognizable, upholding the IJ’s determinization that it lacked social distinction in Guatemala. (Cruz Galicia v. Garland, 7/1/24
BIA Issues Memo on the Handling of Classified Information at the BIA
The BIA issued BIA Operating Policies and Procedures Memorandum 24-01, Classified Information at the Board of Immigration Appeals, on the proper handling of classified information at the BIA.
Practice Alert: EOIR Giving Respondents “Notice of Failure to Prosecute”
AILA’s EOIR National Committee provides a practice alert on EOIR's "Notice of Failure to Prosecute" to ensure attorneys are aware of how EOIR is handling Respondents who appear in immigration court on the date and time listed on an NTA that DHS has failed to file with the Immigration Court.
BIA Invites Amicus Briefs on Scope of IJ's Duty to Develop the Record for Pro Se Respondents
The BIA invites amicus briefs on the issue of the scope of the Immigration Judge's duty to develop the record for a pro se respondent and if this duty is affected by individual characteristics of the respondents, such as education level or language ability. Briefs are due by 7/29/24.
CA9 Holds That Conviction in California for Impeding Person from Reporting Crime Was Offense “Relating to Obstruction of Justice”
The court held that the petitioner’s conviction in California for violating Cal. Penal Code §136.1(b)(1), which encompasses conduct geared toward impeding a person from reporting a crime, qualified as an aggravated felony under INA §101(a)(43)(S). (Cordero-Garcia v. Garland, 6/27/24)
Practice Alert: Dilley Detention Closure Opportunity to Advocate for Release
ICE announced on June 10 that they are closing the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas. AILA members can direct requests for release or parole to snalegalaccess-dilley@ice.dhs.gov. For most cases, ICE will consider release to a sponsor, family member, or NGO.
Think Immigration: For Pride Month, and Every Month of the Year – Gender Affirming Language in Immigration Court
On the AILA Blog: Think Immigration, the authors of a recent practice resource “Gender Affirming Language in Immigration Court” ask, and begin answering, a key question for all of us: how can we build a more gender-affirming courtroom together?
CA9 Holds That Petitioner’s Jehovah’s Witness Faith Was One Central Reason for His Feared Harm in El Salvador
The court held that the BIA erred in determining the petitioner was not eligible for asylum because he was not targeted due to a protected ground, finding that the record compelled the conclusion that religion was one central reason for his feared harm. (Alfaro Manzano v. Garland, 6/25/24)
CA7 Finds It Lacks Jurisdiction to Review IJ’s Denial of Petitioner’s Request for Cancellation under Wilkinson v. Garland
The court held that, under the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Wilkinson v. Garland, it lacked jurisdiction to consider the Mexican petitioner’s challenge to the IJ’s discretionary decision denying cancellation of removal. (Santiago Lopez v. Garland, 6/24/24)