The deportation process for illegal aliens and criminal alien residents is designed for failure:
EOIR litigation bureaucracy is the problem, not
the solution
The Executive Office for Immigration Review -- a federal agency made
up of the U.S. Immigration Court system and its appellate body, the Board
of Immigration Appeals -- is the centerpiece of a largely unknown
permanent amnesty for illegal aliens and criminal alien residents within
the U.S. Department of Justice.
With the complicity of the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security, the EOIR litigation bureaucracy forms the
hidden piece of the puzzle of institutionalized mass immigration in the
federal government.
Deportation of foreign nationals in the United States is largely voluntary.
The lengthy EOIR system of hearings and appeals enables illegal aliens
and criminal alien residents to remain in the United States both legally and
illegally.
EOIR and the INS enable the vast majority of detained aliens facing
deportation to be released back to the streets on an immigration bond or
paroled out of federal custody during the EOIR hearing process, giving every
non-detained illegal alien and criminal alien the option of disappearing
back into the United States regardless of the outcome of their Immigration
Court hearings.
The lack of physical security on the land border exposes the EOIR process for the charade that it is -- deported aliens just walk back in.
EOIR makes a federal case out of every illegal alien and criminal alien
resident in the United States
After reviewing Immigration Court decisions at the Board of Immigration
Appeals (its appellate body) the EOIR system also offers federal
circuit appellate court review for the deportation of every illegal alien and
every criminal alien resident in the United States.
EOIR hearings and appeals are never really over until the alien wins.
Considering the laundry list of relief from deportation available in
Immigration Court, EOIR removal proceedings are really "get to stay"
proceedings.
EOIR is a permanent amnesty by stealth.
EOIR routinely grants "green cards" (lawful permanent resident status) to
illegal aliens, and allows convicted criminal aliens to remain in the United
States.
EOIR simply is not designed for detaining and deporting aliens.
EOIR is the four-letter word of immigration policy
EOIR is entirely unknown in the major media.
EOIR litigation is the livelihood of thousands of immigration lawyers,
whose interests are represented by their lobbying group -- the American
Immigration Lawyers Association -- AILA.
The country's over 200 EOIR immigration judges earn from $109,587 to $142,500 per year.
EOIR bureaucracy unnecessarily formalizes simple review processes that
already are entrusted to lesser-paid federal employees including consular officers,
adjudications officers, immigration inspectors, special agents, immigration agents, deportation officers and asylum officers all over the country and the
world.
The EOIR bureaucracy must be abolished
The EOIR's redundant functions should be parceled out to federal law enforcement personnel already in the Department of Homeland Security who can do the job of deporting
illegal aliens and criminal alien residents.
The EOIR litigation bureaucracy is the antithesis of real homeland security.
As a deportation system, EOIR is designed for failure. But as institutionalized mass immigration, EOIR is a raging success!
Read more about this madness in the Juan Mann archive on VDARE.com.
Real Homeland Security:
American Border Patrol reporting live from the Mexican border in Arizona
Civil Homeland Defense on watch in Tombstone, Arizona
The Terry Anderson Show articulating the popular rage from Los Angeles, California
VDARE.com for the truth about immigration and the national question
Obvious Disclaimer: You have probably already realized that this web site is not from a federal government domain,
and that the opinions expressed on this site do not in any way represent the official position of
the DOJ, EOIR, BIA, DHS, CBP, ICE, USCIS or any other branch of the United States government ... but maybe they will someday.