The Immigration Scandal No One Is Talking About
For
decades, immigration officials misled members of Congress about the extent to
which illegal aliens failed to attend court hearings. (Photo: CactuSoup/Getty
Images)
COMMENTARY
BY
Mark H. Metcalf served in the administration
of George W. Bush in posts at the Justice and Defense departments, including a
judgeship on the Miami Immigration Court. He is a Kentucky prosecutor and a
veteran of Iraq.
Among
the least talked about scandals in Washington is how immigration officials
spent decades misleading Congress about the number of migrants evading court. I
discussed that scandal at length in my last article.
In advancing this
decadeslong effort, no accounting trick and no false narrative was out of
bounds. Never in any year did these officials tell the real story of a court
system in crisis. Brave rhetoric and bleached numbers consistently camouflaged
the courts’ disarray.
“The fight against
terrorism,” the Bush and Obama administrations boldly declared from 2005
through 2012, “is the first and overriding priority of the Department of
Justice. … A key component of this effort is the securing of our nation’s
borders and the repair of the immigration system as a whole. The application
and enforcement of our immigration laws remain a critical element of this
national effort.”
Both administrations
insisted that immigration courts serve “as the front-line presence nationwide
in immigration matters.”
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Yet court officials’
words and actions didn’t match up with a “front-line presence.” While nearly a
million people ran from court over the last 22 years—meaning 37 percent of all
those free pending trial failed to appear for their hearings—no alarm was
sounded by those in charge.
The courts’ 2007
annual report is just one example of the misleading numbers court officials
pushed out for congressional oversight and public consumption each year.
“The overall
failure-to-appear … rate decreased,” officials stated, “to 19 percent in 2007
from the five-year high of 39 percent in 2006.” This was pure whitewash.
Accurate accounting showed the failure-to-appear rate in 2006 was 59 percent—51
percent higher than court executives admitted. Nor was the real
failure-to-appear rate in 2007 a lowly 19 percent. It was 36 percent, nearly
double what the courts reported to Congress.
But gaming failures
to appear in court was just one dynamic that officials suppressed to the point
of dishonesty. Others, like unexecuted deportation orders, received scant
official mention, but got out anyway.
“All should be
troubled,” wrote immigration appeals Judge Edward Grant in 2006, “by the fact
that only a small fraction of final orders of deportation … are actually
executed.”
Records confirm this.
Of the 1,254,152 aliens who were ordered deported from 1996 through 2016, 76
percent of them—953,506 to be exact—remained in the U.S. They not only
remained, but grew.
From a total of
557,762 unexecuted removal orders in 2008 were added 395,744 through August
2016—a 71 percent increase in less than eight years. Despite expanded
enforcement since 2017, court records say failures to appear in court will only
increase and with them, experience shows, unexecuted removal orders.
None of this is
new—yet nothing has been done. Failures to appear in court have predicated
evasion of removal orders for years and are chronic symptoms of an immigration
system turned upside down.
A 1989 Government
Accountability Office audit on immigration courts foreshadowed today’s
extremes. It concluded that “aliens have nothing to lose by failing to appear
for hearings” and noted that over the preceding 30 years illegal entry into
the United States increased by 2,200 percent—from 45,000 in 1959 to 1.2 million
in 1989—and, as illegal entry grew, so did failures to appear in court.
The Government
Accountability Office’s audit also addressed cause and effect—and it didn’t
blame illegal aliens. “Disregard for the courts,” it stated, stemmed from a
“lack of repercussions.” Few aliens, it said, faced any “adverse consequences,”
deportation included.
A 2006 Justice
Department inspector general’s report agreed, stating the “program for
deporting illegal aliens had been largely ineffective” and that “89 percent of
nondetained aliens released into the U.S. who were subsequently issued final
orders of removal were not removed.”
For a watchful
public, these failures prove the gross inadequacy of federal response to
problems now years in the making. All involve frail courts, feeble enforcement,
and the willingness of government executives to hide embarrassing truths that
worsen the causes underlying them.
What’s more is that
in human terms, these trends also bring tragedies.
Algerian-born
immigrant Ahmed Ferhani was arrested by New York City police on robbery and
narcotics charges in 2010. Facing deportation, he remained free pending trial,
then fled court in 2011. He was later arrested—but not before plotting attacks
on Manhattan synagogues and the Empire State Building.
Jose Alfaro, a
Salvadoran national, was ordered deported in 2002. Despite two later arrests,
he remained at-large for nine years before murdering three people in Manassas,
Virginia, on Feb. 10, 2011.
Kesler Dufrene, a
Haitian national and twice-convicted burglar, was ordered deported upon
completing his Florida prison sentence in 2010. Still, Immigration and Customs
Enforcement released him, and on Jan. 2, 2011, he gunned down two adults and a
15-year-old in North Miami.
From these
self-inflicted failures that now tarnish our immigration institutions, a simple
lesson emerges: The nation that can elevate the immigrant must likewise
sanction the violator.
Immigration done
right—by attracting the talented, redeeming the persecuted, and removing the
offender—dignifies and enriches us all. The systemic disorder America now faces
does neither.
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