Five days, 12 arrests: A week inside San Diego Immigration Court

Inside a courtroom tucked away on the second floor of the San Diego federal building a man lately spent his last limited hours of liberty Orlando had applied for asylum a month before He didn t speak English He didn t have a lawyer he couldn t afford one He didn t want to be detained But the only attorney present in court representing the Department of Homeland Guard explained the judge it was no longer in the ruling body s best interest to pursue his matter Instead the attorney noted they needed to transfer him to expedited removal proceedings In other words ICE was about to arrest him The asylum-seeker in Courtroom reported he was afraid He declared he didn t want to be deported He pleaded asking if there was anything else he could do The judge explained that he still had the opportunity to express his fear in detention Please keep fighting for yourself Judge Jos Luis Pe alosa Jr revealed The man crying walked to the back of the courtroom to make one last phone call before he stepped outside And when he walked out the door he did what the judge described him to do He cooperated Head down he walked to the elevator with the seven ICE agents waiting to make the arrest He solicited nothing and declared nothing This has been the fate of the more than people who have been arrested in the hallway of San Diego Immigration Court as they exited their proceedings since May Little is known about the day-to-day operations of a federal immigration court Unlike other federal and state courts no online database exists allowing constituents access to filings There is also no online listing of cases to be heard on a specific day There is however a docket displayed on a TV in the immigration court check-in room but even that list isn t comprehensive Times of San Diego observed arrests and court proceedings that were open to the community for five consecutive days During that period from June to June individuals were arrested Arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement have occurred at immigration courts statewide as a part of President Donald Trump s deportation campaign one that has grown exponentially in contemporary months These courtroom arrests do not occur at random nor do they even necessarily target those with criminal records despite the states of the federal establishment Before arrests the administration dismisses a person s matter To do so the attorney cites either a change in enforcement priorities and policies or states that pursuing the situation is no longer in the ruling body s best interest The people being detained are the people that were paroled under the Biden administration that entered the country somewhat legally because parole gives them a temporary legal status disclosed immigration attorney Wismick Saint-Jeans What the Trump administration did is terminate the parole thereby rendering those people somewhat illegal When the DHS attorney terminates for expedited removal these people have no status and ICE can detain them Expedited removal was created in and used only at port of entries until when it was expanded to allow undocumented individuals present in the U S for under two weeks and within miles of a U S land edge to be categorized on a fast-track to deportation Following the January executive order that Trump issued on the first day of his second term the two-week requirement has been expanded to two years and the -mile specification has been scrapped to include the entire country In a report sent to Times of San Diego DHS stated Secretary Kristi Noem is reversing former President Joe Biden s catch and release approach that allowed millions of unvetted illegal aliens to be let loose on American streets This Administration is once again implementing the rule of law