Top 10 Reasons the EOIR Computer System is Down

If you are an attorney or an immigrant with a case before the Immigration Court, you’ve probably noticed that the computer system has been down for almost two weeks. The phone system for checking case status is not working, and there are all sorts of problems at the courts and the BIA. Apparently, the cause of these difficulties is that some servers in Fairfax, Virginia are broken and cannot easily be repaired. No one seems to know why this happened, and EOIR (the Executive Office for Immigration Review) is not telling us much. The EOIR website says only that they are experiencing a “hardware failure.”

EOIR computer techs are working day and night to solve the problem.
EOIR computer techs are working day and night to solve the problem.

As a public service, I have decided to step in and fill this information gap with unfounded speculation. I figure that if I take the time to write something down, people might as well believe it. So to all those waiting for the system to start up again, take comfort. I present to you the top 10 reasons that the EOIR computers are not working:

10. Juan Osuna forgot to pay the electric bill.

9. The Y2K bug finally kicked in. 

8. The computer shut itself down after it played 35 million games of tic-tac-toe and learned that it is impossible to “win” a removal case. 

7. It is getting more and more difficult to find new vacuum tubes and punch cards.

6. Once the computer calculated that the average time to the next hearing exceeds the life expectancy of the average respondent, it decided there was no point and turned itself off.

5. Everyone who signed up for Obamacare has accidentally been deported.

4. Someone asked the computer to figure out how the Asylum Clock works, and it blew up.

3. Joe Arpaio arrested the computer for helping “illegals” remain in the U.S.

2. If you build a 500 gigabyte computer, someone will file a 501 gigabyte case.

1. Everyone who knows how to fix a computer has already been deported.

There you have it. Some of these explanations may even prove to bear a relationship to reality. If so, remember that you heard it here first.

EOIR’s Experimental “Pilot Program” Devastates Asylum Seekers

The New York Times recently reported on a new policy at the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) and the Executive Office for Immigration Review (“EOIR”) designed to prioritize the removal of criminal aliens.  Under the policy, DHS will review cases and terminate proceedings for aliens deemed a low priority for removal.  At the same time, EOIR (the Immigration Courts) will re-arrange its dockets to expedite priority cases.  From December 4, 2011 to January 13, 2012, EOIR will be implementing the Prosecutorial Discretion Pilot Project in Baltimore and Denver.  The results for aliens seeking asylum are already pretty devastating, and if the program goes national in its present form, we can expect serious problems for many asylum seekers.

Some experiments have unintended consequences.

My first experience with the program came last week when we received notice that my client’s Individual Hearing was re-scheduled from this December to May 2014 (yes, that is 2014, almost 2.5 years from now).  The man is an Eritrean national who fled persecution in his homeland.  He has a decent case and he had been hoping for a resolution later this month.  Now he must wait until 2014.  He has no work permit and the Asylum Clock is stopped in his case.

According to EOIR, the goal of the Pilot Program is “to ensure that [limited] resources are focused on the Administration’s highest immigration enforcement priorities.”  Unfortunately, in this case, the Administration’s “enforcement priorities” (i.e., removal of aliens) comes at the expense of our country’s humanitarian obligations.

Part of the problem, I think, is the government’s attitude, articulated by the Supreme Court in INS v. Doherty, 502 U.S. 314, 323 (1992), that “every delay works to the advantage of the deportable alien who wishes merely to remain in the United States.”  I have always felt that this statement reflects an insensitivity and ignorance about many aliens who are in the U.S.  While some aliens do merely hope to delay their removal, asylum seekers wish to see their cases resolved as quickly as possible.  There are a number of reasons for this: Asylum seekers are hoping to petition for their family members, some of whom face threats in the home country; asylum seekers fear return to their country, and waiting for years to learn their fate is extremely stressful; many asylum seekers are young and hope to study in university, which is difficult without lawful status; many asylum seekers are well educated and hope to find professional jobs, which is also difficult without status.

For all these reasons, delaying asylum hearings for 2+ years is devastating to many asylum seekers.

The Pilot Program is going forward, and I imagine that the same or similar policies will be adopted throughout the U.S.  Given this new reality, here are a couple suggestions about how EOIR can mitigate the difficulty to asylum seekers and other aliens who are hoping for a resolution of their cases:

– When an asylum case is postponed, the Asylum Clock should start automatically, so that the asylum seeker can obtain her work permit.

– EOIR should reserve some time slots in the (relatively) near future for asylum seekers and others whose cases have been postponed.  Aliens that wish to have a sooner resolution of their cases can file motions to expedite.  Thus, for example, if EOIR reserved some time slots in 2012, my 2014 client could file a motion requesting one of those dates.

Finally, while it might be futile to argue that we should not be prioritizing removals over protecting people fleeing persecution, I want to give it a try.  Statistically, most removals involve people with no criminal histories.  Even many “criminal aliens” are convicted of very minor violations (driving without a license, using a false ID, and drunk in public are three common violations).  The benefit to the U.S. of removing these people quickly–and often separating them from their family members–is pretty minimal.  On the other hand, as discussed above, the harm of leaving legitimate asylum seekers in limbo for long periods is severe.  If these competing interests are balanced, it seems unjust that asylum seekers should never receive priority over the removal of “criminal aliens.”  EOIR should re-think its policy to account for the needs of legitimate asylum seekers.