It Is Right and Proper to Laugh at the Suffering of Journalists
Here's the GOP Rep Whose Lightning Round of Questioning Wrecked the Biden DOJ
This Canadian News Outlet's Segment on the Recent School Shooting Makes MS Now...
CNN's Scott Jennings Wrecks a Lib Guest's Narrative on Election Integrity With a...
The Nancy Guthrie Abduction Story Has Become the Willy Wonka Ferry Ride of...
Lady, What the Hell Were You Thinking Eating This Crab!?
For Epstein Victims and Members of Congress, It’s Time to Put Up or...
The Brilliant 'Reasoning' of the Left
The Decline of the Washington Post
Ingrates R’ Us
Jeffries and Schumer Denounce Trump's 'Racist' Video — but Who Are They to...
NYC Needs School Choice—Not ‘Green Schools’
Housing Affordability Is About Politics, Not Economics
Is It Cool to Be Unpatriotic? Perhaps — but It’s Also Ungrateful
A Chance Meeting With Richard Pryor — and Its Lasting Impact
Tipsheet

New Report Reveals Obama Quietly 'Closed' Hundreds of Thousands of Deportation Cases

President Trump's Immigration and Customs Enforcement team has been rounding up illegal immigrants all over the country and sending them packing, demanding they reenter the United States the right way. They are deporting about 16,900 people per month. Furthermore, fewer people are trying to illegally enter the U.S. and immigration arrests under Trump have skyrocketed, up by 38 percent more than this time last year.

Advertisement

Believe it or not, this rate is actually slower than the one held during the Obama administration. A Politico report from earlier this month even showed that deportations under Obama are actually outpacing Trump's so far. In 2012, for instance, ICE removed 34,000 people per month.

Yet, Obama wasn't completely interested in the rule of law, it seems. In a new study from the Center for Immigration Studies, we find that hundreds of thousands of deportation cases were swept under the rug under his watch.

In the report for the Center for Immigration Studies, former immigration judge Andrew R. Arthur said that there are some 100,000 cases that were closed, but told Secrets that it could be as high as 200,000.

"My back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest at least 100,000 more are possible, for 200,000 on top of the 600,000 we currently have," said Arthur.

The judge doesn't believe this to be an issue in the near future.

Advertisement

"The good news is that the Trump administration has reversed the practice of administrative closure of cases that are not a priority, and has effectively eliminated prioritization as well, returning ‘prosecutorial discretion' to its proper role as a law-enforcement tool to be used on a case-by-case basis, not a blanket abdication of authority," he wrote in the report titled, "The Immigration Court Backlog Is Larger than We Know."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement