News

Law360: Pugin Ruling Lowers Bar For Felony-Based Deportation

In Pugin v. Garland, the Supreme Court held that an offense may “relate to” obstruction of justice under the INA’s definition of an aggravated felony even if the underlying statute does not require a pending investigation or proceeding.

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The Feeling of Freedom

On July 4th, I will celebrate with my mixed-immigrant, first-generation family, neighbors, and community.  I tell my little one she is an Incan-Viking Warrior (because she is). And that there are places where not everyone is free, including in our own country. But we are working to change that. I try to teach her about refugees and why people flee their homes to come to the United States.

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Policy Brief: Access to Records in Immigration Court

This Policy Brief examines the beneficial impact of increased access to immigration court records in addressing inefficiencies and due process violations, including the backlog, in removal proceedings. 

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Breaking: Facility Accused of Restricting Legal Access for Detained Immigrants

A complaint was filed to address systemic failures at Pike County Correctional Facility. Immigrants held at the facility are facing restricted access to legal counsel, hampering their ability to prepare for appearances in immigration court.

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BREAKING: Attorneys advocate for better due process in response to immigration judges making conveyor-belt deportation decisions

Immigration attorneys nationwide have witnessed a concerning increase in immigration judges issuing deportation decisions without individualized analysis. Instead, these barebones decisions often rely on boilerplate “form addenda,” which are standardized summaries of immigration law not specific to any noncitizen’s case.

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USA Today: A Letter to Prince Harry

Unfortunately, Harry, like tens of thousands of immigrants in the U.S., your admission to minor drug offenses could be a deportable offense that separates you indefinitely from your wife and children.

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Law360: Immigration Board Must Mend Choice Of Law Post-Garcia

The Board of Immigration Appeals recently held in Matter of Garcia that choice of law should be determined by the location of the immigration court in which a charging document is filed and where jurisdiction vests, except in instances where a charging document is filed at an administrative control court, or when the immigration judge grants a change of venue.

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The New York Times Letter to the Editor: “Who Gets In? A Guide to America’s Chaotic Border Rules”

The end of Title 42 and the new asylum restrictions create a second-class status in the U.S. Although the Biden administration offers a “humanitarian parole” option for asylum seekers from select countries, that is merely permission to work for two years, with no pathway to permanent legal status. Like DACA, it creates indefinite uncertainty.

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Statement about the recent passing of two unaccompanied children

CAIR Coalition is deeply saddened to learn of the recent passing of two unaccompanied children, both from Honduras, while under the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). This is a tragic loss, and our hearts go out to their families and communities.

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Deterrence, Detention, and Deportation: New Immigration “Reforms” Break International Laws and Devastate the U.S. Asylum System

This week may be the most critical for immigrants since the start of the Biden administration. New “reforms” will come into effect at the Southern border on Thursday, May 11, replacing the entry ban enacted under Title 42. 

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Friend-of-the-court brief for immigrants impacted by ICE data breach

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights (CAIR) Coalition filed a friend-of-the-court brief, also known as an Amicus brief, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to support asylum seekers in detention who were impacted by a data breach of their personal information by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

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Testimony for the Budget Oversight Committee

In the U.S. immigration system, people are forced to face detention and deportation in civil immigration court with no right to counsel in their immigration hearings. Those without lawyers face enormous odds in fighting their cases.

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Tragic Fire at Migrant Detention Facility

As Congress and the Biden administration bicker over which side can do less to help the broken immigration system, 38 men lost their lives this week when a migrant detention facility caught fire. Another 29 are severely injured. This tragedy has broken the hearts of families and communities across both sides of the border.

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Immigrant families face devastating consequences because of Biden’s empty promises.

President Biden’s broken promises on immigrant rights continue to pile up. During his 2020 presidential campaign, President Biden said he would “end Trump’s detrimental asylum policies” and “the mismanagement of the asylum system, which fuels violence and chaos at the border.” In addition, he vowed that “children should be released from ICE detention with their parents immediately.”

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CAIR Coalition Condemns the Biden Administration's Proposed Asylum Ban

CAIR Coalition denounces the Biden Administration’s new proposed asylum rule, which will severely limit access to asylum for those arriving at the Southern border.

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BREAKING: Asylum seekers impacted by the ICE data breach are still waiting for answers

This week, almost two months after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) committed a serious data security breach, asylum seekers in detention are still waiting for answers.

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STATEMENT: Bill to Grant Afghan Evacuees a Path to Residency

Without the Afghan Adjustment Act, many Afghan evacuees who risked their lives for the United States will never access permanent protection or be reunited with their family members who are still stranded and in danger in Afghanistan.

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Statement on Immigration Removal Proceedings and Migrant Services Bill

On September 20, the D.C. council approved the "Migrant Services and Support Emergency Amendment Act," which provides temporary support and services to immigrants arriving in D.C. The DC Council is voting today on an interim version of the bill, followed by a permanent version later this year. 

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BREAKING: Lawsuit that secured release of immigrants detained in Maryland during the pandemic ends as detention centers are shut down

Immigrants’ rights groups play a crucial part in the national effort to protect detained individuals from COVID-19. The primary case seeking the release of immigrants detained in Maryland during the COVID-19 pandemic, Coreas v. Bounds, was dismissed without prejudice.

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In Solidarity with Asylum Seekers

CAIR Coalition stands in solidarity with the 10,000 asylum seekers and other immigrants that have been bussed and flown, some under false pretenses, to unfamiliar locations throughout the country. We support the local humanitarian and legal organizations in DC, New York, Chicago, and now Massachusetts, that have stepped up to coordinate and deliver essential services with the compassion that all human beings deserve.

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