Backlog Of Cases?

Billy_Kinetta

Paladin of the Lost Hour
Mar 4, 2013
52,766
22,196
2,320
"lengthy backlogs of more than 456,000 cases mean that immigrants can effectively remain in the US for years before a judge decides whether they should leave the country. Also, recent court rulings have complicated the government’s plans to hold families in immigration jails pending deportation proceedings."

In other words, the bar is open, and on the house. You're paying.

http://nypost.com/2015/10/30/immigr...ink-they-can-stay-in-us-and-collect-benefits/
 
"lengthy backlogs of more than 456,000 cases mean that immigrants can effectively remain in the US for years before a judge decides whether they should leave the country. Also, recent court rulings have complicated the government’s plans to hold families in immigration jails pending deportation proceedings."

In other words, the bar is open, and on the house. You're paying.

http://nypost.com/2015/10/30/immigr...ink-they-can-stay-in-us-and-collect-benefits/

In other words, the bar is open, and on the house.

Backlog of cases?

th


Joking aside, these judges need to start putting in 18 hour days, 7 days a week, until this situation gets down to a more manageable size
 
"lengthy backlogs of more than 456,000 cases mean that immigrants can effectively remain in the US for years before a judge decides whether they should leave the country. Also, recent court rulings have complicated the government’s plans to hold families in immigration jails pending deportation proceedings."

In other words, the bar is open, and on the house. You're paying.

http://nypost.com/2015/10/30/immigr...ink-they-can-stay-in-us-and-collect-benefits/

In other words, the bar is open, and on the house.

Backlog of cases?

th


Joking aside, these judges need to start putting in 18 hour days, 7 days a week, until this situation gets down to a more manageable size

Have each state simply rule the combined cases en masse, using applicable law. Instant case clearance. Why should the states be subjected to the damage caused by the federal governments' refusal to honor their oaths and enforce the law?
 
I keep arguing that is where they need funding to move those cases. That's how I know that congress isn't serious.
 

Forum List

Back
Top