[Senate Hearing 118-578]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]



                                                        S. Hrg. 118-578

                     PRESERVING DUE PROCESS AND THE
                   RULE OF LAW: EXAMINING THE STATUS
                   OF OUR NATION'S IMMIGRATION COURTS

=======================================================================





                                HEARING

                               before the

                      SUBCOMMITTEE ON IMMIGRATION,
                     CITIZENSHIP, AND BORDER SAFETY

                                 of the

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION
                               __________

                            OCTOBER 18, 2023
                               __________

                          Serial No. J-118-36
                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary




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                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                   RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois, Chair
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island     LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina, 
AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota               Ranking Member
CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware       CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut      JOHN CORNYN, Texas
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah
CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey           TED CRUZ, Texas
ALEX PADILLA, California             JOSH HAWLEY, Missouri
JON OSSOFF, Georgia                  TOM COTTON, Arkansas
PETER WELCH, Vermont                 JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana
LAPHONZA BUTLER, California          THOM TILLIS, North Carolina
                                     MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
             Joseph Zogby, Chief Counsel and Staff Director
      Katherine Nikas, Republican Chief Counsel and Staff Director


      Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, and Border Safety

                    ALEX PADILLA, California, Chair
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island     JOHN CORNYN, Texas, Ranking Member
AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota             CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa
CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware       TED CRUZ, Texas
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              TOM COTTON, Arkansas
CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey           THOM TILLIS, North Carolina
PETER WELCH, Vermont                 MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
               Alyson Sincavage, Democratic Chief Counsel
                Ryan Raybould, Republican Chief Counsel
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

Padilla, Hon. Alex...............................................     1
Cornyn, Hon. John................................................     3
Durbin, Hon. Richard J.
    Prepared statement...........................................    32

                               WITNESSES

Gambler, Rebecca.................................................    12
    Prepared statement...........................................    34

McKinney, Jeremy L...............................................     7
    Prepared statement...........................................    51
    Responses to written questions...............................    58

Stimson, Charles D. ``Cully''....................................    10
    Prepared statement...........................................    62

Tsankov, Hon. Mimi...............................................     9
    Prepared statement...........................................    83
    Responses to written questions...............................    91

                                APPENDIX

Items submitted for the record...................................    31

 
                     PRESERVING DUE PROCESS AND THE
                   RULE OF LAW: EXAMINING THE STATUS
                   OF OUR NATION'S IMMIGRATION COURTS

                              ----------                              

                      WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2023

                      United States Senate,
          Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship,
                                 and Border Safety,
                                Committee on the Judiciary,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:03 a.m., in 
Room 226, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Alex Padilla, 
Chair of the Subcommittee, presiding.
    Present: Padilla [presiding], Klobuchar, Hirono, Booker, 
Welch, Cornyn, Tillis, and Blackburn.

            OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. ALEX PADILLA,
          A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

    Chair Padilla. Good morning, everybody. I'd like to call to 
order this hearing of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on 
Immigration, Citizenship, and Border Safety.
    Before beginning today's hearing, I do want to take a 
moment simply to acknowledge the settlement between the Biden 
administration and the plaintiffs in the Ms. L family 
separation litigation that was announced earlier this week.
    While nothing can fully undo the harms that the zero-
tolerance created, this settlement will provide critical 
safeguards against future family separation policy.
    It's not the specific issue at hand today, but I think 
relevant enough--noteworthy enough to reference in this 
morning's hearing as we begin.
    But we are gathered here for what is the second hearing of 
the Subcommittee this year. I want to thank Ranking Member 
Cornyn for prioritizing today's hearing, all the staff who made 
this hearing possible, and everybody's flexibility with the 
timing of the hearing, given other matters before the Senate 
today.
    We're here to examine the current state of our Nation's 
immigration courts, which are charged with adjudicating 
immigration cases by fairly, expeditiously, and uniformly 
interpreting immigration laws.
    Every day, judges like Judge Tsankov, who is here with us 
to testify today, hear cases in immigration court and determine 
whether to grant relief to respondents who qualify or to issue 
removal orders, which, in other words, is to deport non-
citizens from the United States.
    It's no exaggeration to say that in many cases the outcomes 
of these hearings are a matter of life or death. Yet, as we'll 
hear today, there are mounting challenges that threaten non-
citizens' right to due process and a meaningful opportunity to 
be heard by an independent arbiter.
    Today we'll hear about an immigration court system 
struggling to deliver timely and fair decisions, due, in large 
part, to a growing backlog of cases pending before the 
Executive Office for Immigration Reform, also known as EOIR.
    We'll hear about children without counsel, sometimes as 
young as 1 or 2 years old, who appear before immigration judges 
clutching toys, holding back tears, barely being able to reach 
a court microphone, but who are, nevertheless, under current 
law, largely expected to make their case for asylum alone.
    We'll hear about immigration judges who are asked to 
shoulder impossible workloads of tens of thousands of cases as 
they face shifting priorities and deadlines, all with little to 
no support staff.
    You know, sadly, these experiences are all too common, 
representative of a larger, outdated, and overburdened 
immigration court system that leads to years-long waiting times 
for removal cases and increasing threats to due process. The 
head of EOIR recently stated that the case backlog was, quote, 
``The largest single issue facing the immigration courts 
today.''
    As of August of 2023, there were more than 2.6 million 
cases pending before the courts. The backlog means that some 
respondents must wait years to have their cases adjudicated.
    Now, I want to be clear, this is not a Republican or a 
Democratic issue. The backlog grew every year under President 
Obama. It grew every year under President Trump. And it 
continues to grow today.
    Additionally, because the immigration court system remains 
housed with the Department of Justice, political appointees 
from both Republican and Democratic administrations have 
interfered with the independence of the court.
    This means that with each new administration, the 
immigration courts and the attorneys appearing before them 
experience a whiplash of policy changes and political 
decisions.
    Under the prior administration, we witnessed explicitly 
political appointments and promotions of biased judges, 
overturned precedent that made it harder for victims of 
domestic violence and gang violence to qualify for asylum, and 
case dockets reshuffled to serve a political agenda.
    Now, unlike in criminal proceedings, respondents in 
immigration courts also lack the right to a Government-
appointed counsel if they can't afford representation.
    Right now, less than half of all people with cases before 
the immigration courts have attorneys, and an estimated 80 
percent of detained respondents lack representation.
    And we know that legal representation has a direct and 
profound impact, not just on a respondent's likelihood to win 
their case, but in increasing the efficiency of the courts.
    But rather than guarantee representation, we force non-
citizens, including children, to navigate through this complex 
labyrinth of constantly shifting laws, which even immigration 
lawyers have a hard time keeping up with.
    The result is that whether from excessive case backlogs, 
ongoing political influence, or the lack of guaranteed legal 
representation, our immigration courts risk denying immigrants 
due process. It's clear that our immigration court system is in 
desperate need of reform.
    Now, I can also anticipate some of what my colleagues will 
share during this hearing, ``But what about the border? '' 
Addressing challenges on our southern border, of course, has to 
be part of that solution, but it is not the whole solution.
    As we know, surging resources to enforcement agencies like 
Border Patrol and ICE, without providing necessary resources to 
EOIR for it to keep up, will only further increase the backlog 
of cases--a natural cause and effect of our immigration court 
system.
    Now, as you can see on the chart behind me----
    [Poster is displayed.]
    Chair Padilla [continuing]. The stark resource disparities 
between immigration enforcement agencies and the immigration 
courts over the course of the last 20 years, EOIR'S budget up a 
little bit. ICE and CBP budget up a big amount. The most 
effective change we can make in Congress to address the 
critical issues facing our courts is one of resources, but also 
one where we can pass legislation establishing Article I 
immigration courts.
    This, too, would go a long way to restoring judicial 
independence, due process, and the rule of law in an 
immigration system. But we also have to make smart investments 
in immigration courts, including funding for support staff for 
immigration judges, for legal counsel to boost representation, 
and for funding much-needed process and technological 
improvements with the courts.
    My hope for today's hearing is that my colleagues will come 
to the table with an open mind that we can put aside partisan 
talking points and that we can focus on what steps we can take 
together to fix our immigration courts.
    And to do that, I'm looking forward to hearing from all of 
our witnesses--from your personal experiences, and what steps 
you believe can be taken to improve the efficiency of our 
courts while preserving due process.
    And with that, looking forward to today's hearing, I now 
turn it over to Ranking Member Cornyn for his opening 
statement.

             OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. JOHN CORNYN,
             A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS

    Senator Cornyn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. You and I get 
along very well together. We've done a lot of important work 
together, but I couldn't disagree more about the priorities 
that you've discussed in your opening statement.
    Just since President Biden has been in office, there've 
been roughly 7 million people across our border. Many of them 
turned themselves in, claiming asylum. Others are released on 
humanitarian parole in huge numbers. There've been a million 
and a half got-aways, is what the Border Patrol calls them.
    Of course, if you're evading law enforcement, it tells me 
that maybe you're doing something you might not should be 
doing, like smuggling fentanyl and other drugs into the United 
States.
    The administration has the audacity to claim that all of 
the illegal drugs that come into our country come across the 
ports of entry. That's just not true.
    They have no idea what's happening between the ports of 
entry with all of the got-aways that come across. And, of 
course, there's a fact that 108,000 Americans died of drugs 
mainly that crossed the southern border, certainly the 
fentanyl. The 71,000 Americans who are dead as a result of 
fentanyl poisoning from last year alone. Those came across the 
border from Mexico, made out of chemical precursors from China.
    And then really the untold story of the status quo under 
the Biden administration is the 300,000 children who've been 
placed with sponsors in the interior of the United States.
    And, as The New York Times has documented recently in an 
investigative story, 85,000 wellness calls were made by the 
U.S. Government to these sponsors 30 days after the child was 
placed with a sponsor, and there was no answer.
    And so the Biden administration cannot tell you what the 
status of those children is. We do know that, as documented in 
some of these investigative stories, that some of these 
children have been in--put into forced labor, dangerous jobs 
that they should not be performing.
    We don't know whether they're being trafficked for sex. We 
don't know whether they're being neglected, abused.
    The Biden administration can't tell you because they don't 
frankly care. And if they did care, they would actually do 
something about it.
    So I just hold a very different view that this particular 
matter, as important as it is, and I agree it's important--
independence of the courts is something that's near and dear to 
my heart, having served on the State court bench for 13 years.
    But the courts can only do so much when the Biden 
administration has opened the spigot at the border, and, as you 
know, there's roughly, according to one count, 2.6 million 
cases pending.
    Our immigration judges can't do their job just being 
flooded with this--these huge numbers. And so what does the 
Biden administration do? Well, they end up basically taking 
cases off of the docket on the back end, which make the numbers 
actually look better, but do not actually enforce U.S. law.
    So I agree with you that, that some of the measures people 
like to talk about, like physical infrastructure, is not an 
end-all be-all. It is a piece of the puzzle. Certainly 
technology and boots on the ground are important.
    But policy changes are important, too. As I suggested, 
there are people who literally come to the United States and 
turn themselves in and claim asylum, knowing that they can beat 
the system, that they will be--if they are given a Notice to 
Appear at all, it may be for years in the future. And who knows 
whether they decide to show up or not for that hearing.
    There's no consequences associated with not showing up 
unless, of course, they happen to get arrested for a crime in a 
local jurisdiction and somebody actually checks to see what 
their immigration status should be.
    But we also know that there are, in addition to the 2.6 
million cases pending, in about 1.3 million cases, these 
migrants are given a Notice to Appear, or--not a Notice to 
Appear, a Notice to Report, I guess it's called, to an ICE 
facility in the interior of the United States. And then to 
start the process once they turn themselves in.
    Again, you know, you might ask yourself how many people 
will, if they haven't complied with our laws otherwise, why in 
the world would you think that they're going to turn themselves 
in to ICE so they can get in the line for an immigration 
hearing where roughly 80 percent of the people can't qualify 
for asylum?
    And to me, one of the tragedies of this is, I believe that 
asylum should be available to people who can meet the standard. 
But we have literally millions of people in line waiting for a 
hearing in an immigration court, clogging the courts, 
overburdening the courts when only 15, maybe 20 percent can 
qualify.
    So that means that the 15 to 20 percent who can qualify 
can't get to court on a timely basis, because of the other 80 
percent that are in line.
    So this is an unmitigated disaster. And while I do, as I 
said earlier, believe in the importance of independence of the 
courts, and will listen closely, I just think this is a--this 
is not the top priority.
    If you look at the public polling on President Biden's 
approval rating on how he's dealing with what's happening at 
the border now--which happens to be 1,200 miles of my State--I 
think about 28 percent, if I'm recalling correctly, approve--28 
percent.
    I keep hoping that something will bring my Democratic 
colleagues, including the administration, to the table so we 
can engage in practical problem solving. That's what needs to 
happen.
    So thank you for giving me the opportunity to express my 
views, and look forward to hearing from the witnesses and 
asking some questions. Thank you.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you, Senator Cornyn. While I would 
normally turn to Senator Durbin for opening remarks at this 
point, he could not be here today. Instead, he has shared a 
statement for the record with me that I will enter into the 
record, without objection.
    [The prepared statement of Chair Durbin appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    I also see that the Ranking Member is unable to join us 
this morning, and so we'll proceed to our witness introductions 
and to hear their testimony.
    After I introduce and swear in the witnesses, they'll each 
have 5 minutes to make their opening remarks, and we'll then 
begin our first round of questions, and during which each 
Senator will have 5 minutes. And I ask that colleagues try to 
remain within their allotted time. We'll have a second round if 
there's interest and time allows.
    Introductions.
    I will start now with Mr. McKinney. Jeremy McKinney is the 
founder of McKinney Immigration Law. He's also the immediate 
past president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association 
and a recognized expert in immigration law, particularly on the 
topic of the immigration court system and the need for an 
independent immigration judiciary.
    He previously taught immigration law at Elon University 
School of Law as an adjunct professor, and served on the North 
Carolina State Bar's Specialization Committee. He is a former 
captain and trial counsel in the North Carolina Army National 
Guard, as well as a U.S. Army veteran. We appreciate your 
service, sir.
    I'd also like to introduce Judge Mimi Tsankov. An 
immigration judge and the president of the National Association 
of Immigration Judges. She was appointed to the bench in 2006 
and is seated today at the New York Federal Plaza Immigration 
Court in Manhattan. She previously presided at immigration 
courts in New York, Colorado, and California.
    She has served as an Immigration and Naturalization Service 
assistant district counsel, a special assistant U.S. attorney, 
and as an asylum officer. Judge Tsankov is actively involved 
with the legal and non-legal community, and serves in various 
leadership roles at the Federal Bar Association, the American 
Bar Association and Judicial Division, National Conference of 
Administrative Law Judges.
    She also has an ABA Presidential appointment to the United 
Nations Department of Global Communications in her capacity as 
president of the NAIJ. She's appearing today in her capacity as 
the president of NAIJ and not as a representative of the 
Department of Justice. Just wanted to make that abundantly 
clear.
    We also have Mr. Stimson with us, and I will turn now to 
Ranking Member Cornyn to introduce him.
    Senator Cornyn. We're pleased to have Charles ``Culley'' 
Stimson here, who's the deputy director of the Edwin Meese III 
Center, manager of the National Security Law Program, and 
senior legal fellow and senior advisor to the president of the 
Heritage Foundation.
    Mr. Stimson writes, lectures, and testifies on a wide range 
of--wide range of policy issues, such as law of armed conflict, 
terrorist detainee policy, military commissions, criminal law, 
and the death penalty, of course, immigration, and the war on 
drugs. We're pleased to have you here today, Mr. Stimson. Thank 
you. Look forward to your responses and your statement. Thank 
you.
    Chair Padilla. Welcome, Mr. Stimson.
    And finally, we're joined by Rebecca Gambler, Director in 
the U.S. Government Accountability Office's Homeland Security 
and Justice Team, where she leads GAO's work on border 
security, immigration, and elections issues. Ms. Gambler joined 
GAO in 2002 and has worked on a wide range of issues related to 
Homeland Security and Justice.
    Prior to joining GAO, Ms. Gambler worked at the National 
Endowment for Democracy's International Forum for Democratic 
Studies. Ms. Gambler has an M.A. in national security and 
strategic studies from the United States Naval War College, an 
M.A. in international relations from Syracuse University, and 
an M.A. in political science from the University of Toronto. 
She was a Fulbright fellow to Canada and has a B.A. in 
political science from Messiah College. Thank you for being 
here, as well.
    At this point, let me ask each of you to stand and raise 
your right hands.
    [Witnesses are sworn in.]
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. Please be seated. Let the record 
reflect all witnesses have responded in the affirmative.
    And with that, we'll begin with witness testimony. Mr. 
McKinney, please begin.

      STATEMENT OF JEREMY MCKINNEY,  ATTORNEY  AND  NORTH
       CAROLINA BOARD-CERTIFIED SPECIALIST IN IMMIGRATION
       LAW;  IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT,  AMERICAN IMMIGRA- 
       TION LAWYERS  ASSOCIATION;  AND FOUNDER,  MCKINNEY
       IMMIGRATION LAW, GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA

    Mr. McKinney. Thank you, Chairman Padilla, Ranking Member 
Cornyn, and the Members of the Subcommittee. Thank you for 
inviting me to testify today.
    My name is Jeremy McKinney. I'm the immediate past 
president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, or 
AILA, the National Bar Association of 17,000 immigration 
attorneys. For the past 25 years, I have practiced regularly 
before the immigration courts.
    Let's paint the picture. My office is in Greensboro, North 
Carolina, and my immigration court is in Charlotte. My clients 
typically travel from 2 to 5 hours to appear in court.
    I want to tell you about two children, a brother and sister 
from Central America, that I represented in immigration court 
proceedings. They were sold by their father into domestic 
servitude and then abused by the people who bought them.
    The children escaped and reached the U.S. It became my job 
to prove they qualify for asylum.
    This meant that I need to tell their stories. The brother 
was so young, he struggled to articulate the horrors he had 
experienced, while his older sister bore the deep scars of 
trauma--so severe that she attempted to take her own life while 
her immigration proceedings were pending.
    They ultimately won asylum, but not before they faced a 
bewildering array of legal challenges. Their Notices to Appear 
lacked any hearing date, leaving them confused about when to 
appear. Immigration judges frequently order people removed for 
not appearing.
    Before filing their asylum applications, I had to send a 
copy to USCIS to trigger biometrics appointments for ICE's 
criminal, and security background checks. Some judges have 
ordered people removed for not having their biometrics done, 
even though it's typically beyond their control.
    So errors at any of these stages could have resulted in 
them losing their asylum case--a devastating consequence, and 
really a matter of life or death.
    Prior to hearing, I tried to contact the ICE attorney to 
narrow down the legal issues. But the ICE attorney never 
responded, which is unfortunately common. In fact, ICE has 
recently instructed their attorneys that they don't even need 
to appear in court.
    Ultimately, these siblings won their case because at the 
time, fear of persecution on account of kinship and domestic 
abuse was recognized as a valid basis for asylum.
    But years later, after they won, the Attorney General 
changed asylum law using his unusual power to override 
immigration court decisions and try to block kinship and abuse 
cases. This was reversed by Attorney General Garland.
    Each hurdle posed significant challenges that were rather 
typical for anyone navigating our immigration court system. 
These children could not have navigated it if they had not been 
represented by an attorney.
    It begs the question, if they had been unrepresented, like 
most people in immigration court, would they still be here 
today?
    This is the short and simple truth. Immigration courts are 
not real courts. The Executive Office for Immigration Review, 
or EOIR, is an arm of the Department of Justice headed by a 
political appointee, the Attorney General.
    The AG has total authority over EOIR, including the power 
to hire judges and readjudicate any case they decide. In an 
appeal, the AG represents the Government in seeking to deport 
the person, instead of remaining the neutral decisionmaker.
    The courts, as such, are not fair, and yet they exercise 
enormous power over the people appearing before them. Because 
immigration courts are part of the Department of Justice, they 
are exceptionally vulnerable to interference from the executive 
branch.
    Every--I want to be clear--every administration has 
interfered with the courts. This undermines the court's 
integrity and many of the executive branch's manipulations of 
judges and their dockets simply backfire.
    When we curtail a person's right to a full and fair 
hearing, I can say, as a lawyer, you increase, not decrease 
litigation, and that increases wait times.
    In AILA's view, the only way to restore integrity and 
fairness to the immigration court system, is for Congress to 
create an independent immigration court pursuant to Article I 
of the Constitution. And within this system, the Federal 
Government should fund legal representation for those facing 
removal who cannot afford counsel.
    The process should match the high stakes. But until this 
time comes, we have specific recommendations and commonsense 
reforms to ease the backlog and improve fairness: expanding 
electronic filing, directly accepting filing fees, setting 
clear standards from when a hearing is in person or virtual. 
And EOIR must require ICE to appear at hearings, and--in no 
other court is opposing counsel allowed to skip out on trial.
    While there's symptomatic problems, AILA wants to recognize 
the good things that the current EOIR leadership is doing to 
ease backlogs and restore IJ discretion, but much work needs to 
be done.
    ALA stands ready, sir, to work with your Subcommittee and 
the administration to make immigration courts fair and 
independent. Thank you for your time.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. McKinney appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Padilla. Thank you very much. Judge Tsankov.

     STATEMENT OF HON. MIMI TSANKOV, PRESIDENT, NATIONAL
      ASSOCIATION OF IMMIGRATION JUDGES,  NEW YORK,  NEW
      YORK

    Judge Tsankov. Good morning, Members of the Subcommittee. 
Thank you for the opportunity to testify today.
    As Senator Padilla said, I am an immigration judge seated 
in New York, and I've been on the bench for almost 17 years.
    I want to highlight today how the many challenges the court 
system is facing has led us to have over 2.6 million cases now 
waiting to be heard. I also want to explain why the only real 
solution is to create an independent Article I immigration 
court.
    Let me walk you through some of the difficulties that I've 
observed.
    There are about 700 immigration judges at the roughly 70 
courts around the country, and that works out to be about 3,700 
cases per judge.
    Each day I start my first trial at 8:30 in the morning, and 
I generally hold four hearings a day before I leave for the 
day. We're short staffed in New York City, much like the rest 
of the country, so I share a legal assistant with another 
judge. And staffing shortages, as you heard, do cause delays. I 
have very limited judicial law clerk support, and that 
restricts the help I can get resolving complicated questions of 
law, another cause for delay.
    With the recent high levels of migration at the border 
related to migrants bypassing the lawful pathways rule, many 
judges are being pulled from their home court dockets to handle 
border matters.
    These special assignments, brought on by real need, 
nevertheless wreak havoc on our home court dockets. Cases 
languish and are rescheduled to new dates far into the future.
    The consequence is a ballooning backlog. In Charlotte, 
North Carolina for example, the judges are resetting cases into 
2027.
    This summer I volunteered to work at the border in Laredo, 
Texas, on a detained docket where I handled credible fear 
review cases. I worked long hours and weekends hearing cases, 
and during that time, my home docket sat idle. My cases needed 
to be rescheduled to the end of my docket up to a year down the 
road.
    We have reached this point, in large part, because our 
courts are housed within the Department of Justice, and that 
control over the courts has resulted in extreme pendulum swings 
across subsequent administrations. Our judges must navigate 
their judicial responsibilities on the one hand, and heavy 
political scrutiny on the other. And these swings have 
significant operational impact.
    The ever-shifting political priorities result in dockets 
being shuffled and reprioritized. For the respondents who've 
been waiting years for their day in court, it's disheartening. 
Justice delayed is justice denied.
    As long as I can remember, the court has been poorly 
resourced. The budget for interpreters dries up. Plans for 
critical IT system improvements get put on the back burner. 
Training conferences are canceled. Staffing levels stagnate. 
Space needs aren't addressed.
    For example, we have years' worth of paper files sitting in 
our hallways waiting to be scanned. These are not just my 
views. Both the GAO and the Inspector General have released 
numerous reports critical of EOIR management.
    We know that the stakes are very high for those in 
proceedings before us, especially the many unrepresented 
individuals. Finding counsel is difficult and pro bono 
providers are overwhelmed. All of this results in court delays.
    Now, this administration has enhanced access to pro bono 
attorneys, but many vulnerable respondents, including children, 
remain unrepresented. I've decided many children's cases in the 
past. It is heartbreaking to see a young, unrepresented child 
in court, and I can tell you we need to take more time to 
address those cases properly.
    Only an independent Article I immigration court can fix the 
problems that plague the immigration court. This is not a 
political solution, it's a good Government solution. It 
maintains the Presidential prerogative to enforce immigration 
laws while separating out case adjudication. It would reduce 
the backlog because it would eliminate the DOJ bureaucracy. The 
judges would be responsible for managing their own resources 
and dockets like they do in Federal and State courts around the 
country.
    Of course, it is not the only fix that's needed to repair 
our system. But if Congress takes the necessary steps to remove 
the court from the executive branch, an independent court would 
begin the process of healing this broken system.
    An Article I court would ensure judicial independence, 
protect due process, and help us fulfill our mission as judges. 
Thank you for your attention. I'm happy to answer any 
questions.
    [The prepared statement of Judge Tsankov appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Padilla. Thank you, Judge. Mr. Stimson.

   STATEMENT OF CHARLES D. ``CULLY'' STIMSON, DEPUTY DI-
    RECTOR, EDWIN  MEESE III CENTER  FOR LEGAL AND JUDI-
    CIAL STUDIES,  AND MANAGER,  NATIONAL  SECURITY  LAW
    PROGRAM, THE HERITAGEFOUNDATION, WASHINGTON, DC

    Mr. Stimson. Chairman Padilla, Ranking Member Cornyn, and 
Members of the Committee, thank you for the honor of testifying 
today.
    My testimony today will rely on my experiences as an 
assistant U.S. attorney, a criminal defense lawyer, and 30 
years in the Navy JAG Corps, where I retired as a captain and 
served for 5 years as a military trial judge.
    First, I want to make three interrelated points.
    First, unlike all Federal and most State court judges, 
immigration judges cannot dismiss a case for failure to state a 
claim.
    Second, immigration judges cannot render judgment on the 
pleadings, even in patently frivolous cases.
    And third, even though Congress passed a law 26 years ago 
giving immigration judges contempt authority, no administration 
has actually implemented that rule. Which means immigration 
judges don't have contempt authority.
    The bottom line is this. Immigration judges, wherever 
they're housed, must have these common judicial tools to manage 
their crushing caseloads.
    Let me put a finer point on it. You've heard that there's 
over 2.6 million cases pending before the courts. That's up 
from 876,000 in 2019. If Congress does nothing, it deprives 
immigration judges of the common judicial tools, their 
caseloads will climb into the millions.
    But if you give them 12(b)(6) authority, and the ability to 
render a judgment on the pleadings and then arm them with 
contempt authority, their caseloads, by some estimates, would 
be cut by 75 percent. This is not and should not be a partisan 
issue. This is a good governance issue as the judge said, pure 
and simple.
    My first point, summary judgment. We all know that it's a 
bedrock principle of civil litigation in both Federal and State 
courts that a plaintiff must plead a viable legal claim. But 
that's not the case in immigration court. Whereas all State and 
Federal courts have tools they can use to dispose of meritless 
cases at the early stages of litigation, the immigration courts 
do not. That makes no sense at all.
    Immigration judges are handcuffed managing tens of 
thousands of patently meritless cases from filing to final 
judgment. On average, an immigration case takes 3-plus years, 
from filing to final judgment. By contrast, Federal judges are 
empowered by 12(b)(6) to dismiss claims that are inadequately 
pleaded or legally baseless. The courts in all 50 States also 
have this authority.
    To determine whether a claim is legally baseless, the court 
assumes that the facts alleged are true. The court then 
considers whether those facts satisfy the elements of a viable 
claim. If the facts, as pleaded, do not give rise to a viable 
claim, then the court can dismiss the case. Courts need not 
wait for a motion to dismiss a meritless case, but in most 
cases, they must give the party whose claims are dismissed an 
opportunity to be heard.
    My second point, judgment on the pleadings. Federal Civil 
Procedure 12(c) gives Federal district courts the power to 
grant judgment to a party based solely on the pleadings. 
Typically, this tool is used when the parties agree on the 
underlying facts of a case, but disagree about their legal 
effect. Alternatively, as with a dismissal under 12(b)(6), a 
court may assume that the facts alleged are true and consider 
whether they give rise to a viable claim.
    The courts then apply the law to those facts to determine 
whether a party is entitled to early judgment. Typically, a 
party must move for judgment on the pleadings before a court 
can enter an early judgment.
    Immigration judges lack both of these tools to prune their 
dockets. This means that when a plainly meritless case--and 
there are a lot of them--comes before them, they have no choice 
but to retain it, manage it, hold hearings on it, and only 
after the judicial process is exhausted, enter the inevitable 
judgment.
    The result is judicial gridlock. Meritorious cases stall 
behind a tsunami of baseless ones. Here's a fact. In FY22, EOIR 
granted only 14 percent of asylum claims.
    In my written testimony, I propose legislative tweaks to 
existing immigration statutes that would add 12(b)(6) and 
judgment on the pleading of this authority to immigration 
judges.
    My third point, contempt power. In 2019, the ABA wrote, 
quote, ``Immigration courts are facing an existential crisis,'' 
and are, quote, ``irredeemably dysfunctional,'' unquote.
    And it's only gotten worse. Twenty-six years ago, Congress 
passed a law giving immigration judges civil contempt 
authority, but it delegated it to the U.S. Attorney General to 
draft the implementing regulations. No administration has done 
so.
    As a result, as you've heard, litigants before the 
immigration courts, Government attorneys and private counsel 
alike, can't be held accountable to the judge with respect to 
matters such as timelines, docketing dates, or even court 
orders.
    Counsel who often carry other cases before non-immigration 
judge courts put a priority on cases where the court has actual 
power to enforce its own orders, with either civil or criminal 
contempt.
    Counsel who appear before immigration judges know these 
judges can only wag their fingers and raise their voices if 
counsel defies a court order, but nothing more.
    As a result, immigration court judges are treated as 
second-class judges, taking a backseat to all other judges who 
have the contempt power over parties and lawyers who knowingly 
violate court orders.
    In summary, immigration judges need the same tools that all 
judges have. First, to trim their dockets of meritless cases, 
and then to manage their existing caseloads and control their 
courtrooms. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Stimson appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. Ms. Gambler.

      STATEMENT OF HON. REBECCA GAMBLER, DIRECTOR, HOME- 
       LAND  SECURITY  AND JUSTICE,  U.S. GOVERNMENT AC- 
       COUNTABILITY OFFICE, WASHINGTON,  DC

    Ms. Gambler. Good morning, Chair Padilla, Ranking Member 
Cornyn, and Members of the Subcommittee. I appreciate the 
opportunity to testify at today's hearing to discuss GAO's work 
on the immigration courts.
    Within the Department of Justice, the Executive Office for 
Immigration Review, or EOIR, is responsible for conducting 
immigration proceedings. EOIR is facing an extremely large case 
backlog and that backlog is growing.
    As of July 2023, EOIR had a backlog of nearly 2.2 million 
pending cases. This is more than 4 times the number of pending 
cases at the start of Fiscal Year 2017.
    EOIR officials have identified resource shortages and 
increasing caseloads as contributing to the backlog. The 
effects of the case backlog are significant. Some respondents 
wait years to have their cases heard, and we've reported that 
the backlog can contribute to immigration judges being able to 
spend less time considering cases.
    GAO has issued numerous reports on the immigration courts, 
and today I'd like to focus my remarks on GAO's most recent 
report on EOIR management issues.
    In particular, I'll discuss our findings on, one, EOIR's 
workforce planning practices, two, the performance appraisal 
program for its judges, and three, EOIR's electronic filing 
system.
    First, over the years, EOIR has taken some steps to improve 
its workforce planning. For example, in recent years, EOIR 
filled its previously vacant human resource officer position 
and signed a contract with the Office of Personnel Management 
for strategic workforce planning support.
    While these are positive steps, significant gaps remain in 
EOIR's workforce planning efforts. Specifically, the agency has 
not yet developed a strategic workforce plan, which is a 
recommendation that GAO first made in 2017. This plan should 
include a determination of needed critical skills and 
competencies, strategies to address those skill and competency 
gaps, and a way to monitor and evaluate the agency's progress.
    EOIR also has not had an agency-wide strategic plan since 
2013. Setting an agency strategic direction is an important 
first step in establishing an effective workforce planning 
practice. EOIR officials have told us that they are drafting an 
updated strategic plan, but they haven't provided a schedule 
for completing it. We recommended that EOIR develop such a 
schedule with target timeframes.
    Second, regarding performance appraisals for judges, EOIR 
has a program that evaluates how immigration judges perform 
their duties using performance plans.
    However, EOIR has not evaluated its overall judge 
performance appraisal program, and some judges we interviewed 
raised concerns about the program, including that performance 
plans are not specific enough, or that expectations for the 
frequency of meetings between judges and their supervisors are 
not realistic in large courts with many judges.
    We recommended EOIR implement a process to periodically 
evaluate the performance appraisal program for judges.
    Finally, regarding EOIR's electronic filing system. The 
agency historically relied upon a paper-based system for filing 
case documentation.
    However, in 2018, EOIR began implementing an e-filing 
system at immigration courts, and as of November 2021, all 
courts have access to it. The system consists of several 
applications that are available to different types of 
stakeholders in the court system. For example, judges and court 
staff used the judicial tools application to access case 
information and create decisions on cases.
    Court staff that we interviewed expressed overall positive 
views of the e-filing system.
    However, court staff also told us they experienced system 
outages and delays while using the judicial tools application. 
While EOIR headquarter officials were aware of these issues, 
EOIR does not have a process to regularly assess whether the 
application is meeting the needs of its users.
    We recommended that EOR develop and implement a process to 
regularly reassess whether judicial tools is meeting the needs 
of its users.
    In closing, as EOIR continues to face a significant and 
growing backlog of immigration cases, effective management 
practices are critical to ensuring that EOIR is well positioned 
to fulfill its mission to adjudicate cases efficiently and 
effectively.
    We have reported that EOIR is facing management challenges 
and continues to need improvement in areas such as workforce 
planning.
    Our recommendations are intended to help position EOIR to 
address those challenges, and we'll continue to monitor actions 
to implement them.
    This concludes my oral statement and I'd be pleased to 
answer any questions.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Gambler appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Padilla. Thank you very much. Thank you, to all of 
our witnesses.
    We'll now turn to questions from the Committee. To begin 
with, I want to explore the importance of legal representation. 
Representation rates in immigration court have been low for 
years. According to EOIR data, just 44 percent of the 5.6 
million people who appeared in immigration courts between 2002 
and 2022 had an attorney.
    And currently, out of more than 2 million immigrants with 
cases pending before the immigration courts, fewer than half 
have representation. These rates are even lower for immigrants 
in detention.
    However, attorneys have a significant impact in every stage 
of removal proceedings. Individuals with representation are 
more likely to show up for their court cases, and are 
significantly more likely to be successful in obtaining relief 
in immigration court.
    In fact, since 2001, EOIR data shows that only 6 percent of 
immigrants who were unrepresented were successful in winning 
their cases. Whereas having representation makes detained 
individuals more than 10 times more likely to prevail.
    Question's for Mr. McKinney. Can you just elaborate further 
on why having an attorney makes such a difference in outcomes 
for individuals, and how having representation impacts court 
efficiencies generally?
    Mr. McKinney. Thank you for the question, Chairman Padilla. 
As our written testimony indicates, there's a 2016 study from 
the American Immigration Council that indicates that 
represented respondents in immigration courts are 5 times more 
likely to gain relief.
    TRAC, a non-partisan organization whose numbers we all rely 
on, points out that those that apply for asylum affirmatively 
and then had to defend that asylum application immigration 
court, they saw their approval rates go to almost 76 percent 
because they were nearly all represented.
    Now, I do want to point out that that's still--that 76 
percent only still represents a very small number of total 
grants in our system.
    But the point is, is that representation ensures due 
process. But it also makes the system more efficient. When all 
the parties know the rules and know how to present a case, 
cases move faster.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. And that's certainly my take, 
which should not be misinterpreted. The goal here isn't simply 
to grant more for the sake of granting more.
    The point here is true due process and an added benefit of 
improved efficiency of the court.
    Now I do want to go back to Mr. Stimson's testimony, his 
argument--or recommendations about contempt authority, ability 
to dismiss, the reference to 12(b)(6).
    Judge Tsankov, interested in your response to those 
statements and recommendations, and Mr. McKinney after that.
    Judge Tsankov. The first--I'll take the first one, which 
was the discussion about dismissal for failure to state a 
claim, and the statement of 75 percent of the cases would be 
reduced--removed from the docket.
    I'm not quite sure where that number 75 percent has come 
from, but to me, that seems like a very large number and a very 
large percentage that I can't quite imagine how that could 
happen.
    But let me explain what's the concern. Most of the people 
that appear before us don't have representation. So how a judge 
would be able to get them in a position so that they could 
state their claim and then the judge simply decide the case 
without them having had an adequate opportunity to present 
their claim, not quite sure how we would be able to do that.
    Fortunately, the administration has put in place--and we 
could consider expanding it--opportunities for pretrial 
conferences because at those pretrial conferences, the 
Department of Homeland Security can certainly say, we support 
this case and it won't require a full and complete hearing.
    But the vast majority of the cases that I see that appear 
before me have sufficient documentation within them, and the 
Department has security questions they want to ask, I would 
need to put it, at least, for a hearing. Thank you.
    Chair Padilla. Mr. McKinney?
    Mr. McKinney. I appreciate Mr. Stimson's comments and 
reading his written testimony, I found myself agreeing with 
much of it, if Immigration court was a real court. But it's 
not.
    Most of these respondents are unrepresented, the rules of 
evidence, Senator Padilla, literally do not apply. The rules of 
evidence do not apply in immigration court.
    I had this actually happen to me a couple of years ago on a 
gender-based claim. The immigration judge dismissed it without 
hearing testimony. As I indicated in my earlier remarks, I 
appealed. I won that appeal. That case is still pending. It's 
been pending now for 6 years.
    So curtailing a person's right to a full and fair hearing 
does not speed things up. It slows things down.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. I'll have further questions in 
the next round, but at this point, Senator Cornyn.
    Senator Cornyn. Mr. McKinney, you say that immigration 
courts are not real courts. You are, I'm sure, aware of the 
fact that the executive branch agencies employ administrative 
law judges across broad, broad sectors of the Federal 
Government. For example, the Department of Labor houses the 
Office of Administrative Law Judges. The Office of 
Administrative Law Judges also do similar work at the Drug 
Enforcement Administration, among others.
    If immigration courts aren't real courts and lack the basic 
due process and independence that you think is necessary, does 
that raise your concerns? Does your concerns apply equally to 
the other functions that these administrative laws, the other 
subject matter areas that they operate in?
    Mr. McKinney. Well, thank you so much for the question, 
Senator Cornyn. I don't want to claim to be an expert in those 
other fields. But from my review in working on this issue, it--
other--in other settings, administrative law judges simply have 
more power to act like judges.
    Senator Cornyn. They're not--they're not independent 
though.
    Mr. McKinney. They're not--they are--in some cases, they 
are not fully independent----
    Senator Cornyn. But, none of the cases are they fully 
independent. They're part of the executive branch. Right?
    Mr. McKinney. Correct. Ultimately there is--ultimately it's 
the administration that is in control that is running the 
Federal Government.
    Senator Cornyn. Judge, do you--I don't know how you handle 
what comes at you, and the volume that comes at you. I can't 
imagine having to do that day in and day out. It just seems 
overwhelming.
    And maybe we need to look at some of the inputs that cause 
people to end up in front of you. But right now, if somebody 
is, let's say, detained at the border and claims asylum, how 
long will it take them to get a hearing in your court?
    Judge Tsankov. In my court, if the case--if they had been 
issued a Notice to Appear, and they would probably get a 
hearing within maybe 5 months for their initial master calendar 
hearing, at which time I'd provide them with some information 
about their rights, then they'd want to probably find some--
have some time to seek representation.
    Senator Cornyn. And so, do you agree--I think somebody 
mentioned the typical time period for adjudication of these 
immigration cases could be up to 3 years?
    Judge Tsankov. I think that's fair.
    Senator Cornyn. And I've seen actually some reports in New 
York newspapers that some immigration courts have backlogs of 
up to 10 years. Is that accurate?
    Judge Tsankov. I can't--I can say that I agree that there 
are some courts, because it's a different distribution of cases 
around the----
    Senator Cornyn. Right.
    Judge Tsankov [continuing]. Country and different numbers 
of judges, some of them do have very extensive delays.
    Senator Cornyn. I noticed that according to the Executive 
Office for Immigration Review adjudication statistics for the 
third quarter, that the median asylum grant rate is 12 percent. 
The mean court asylum grant rate is 16 percent.
    So, and I noted in your court, if I'm reading this 
correctly, the grant rate is roughly 30 percent. But my 
question is really about the 70 percent in your court, or the 
86 percent in courts across the country, that are clogging the 
system.
    That people who ultimately will have no legitimate legal 
basis to claim asylum that are--that are impeding access to the 
courts by people who actually have legitimate claims.
    I think we all agree that people with legitimate claims 
should be heard and should be granted asylum. So--but don't the 
people who don't qualify make that hard?
    Judge Tsankov. When the system is as overburdened as it is, 
it takes time to find and get to those cases that are 
meritorious. But we do re--we are required by the Constitution 
to provide due process even to those individuals that don't 
have ultimately a meritorious claim.
    Senator Cornyn. Well, I understand that, and it is--I'm not 
criticizing you, by any means. I'm just saying that the current 
system, for lack of a better word, there's really no system. 
It's just helter-skelter. But it does create a situation where 
there's backlog because of the sheer volume.
    Mr. Stimson, you know, years ago, maybe 2 years ago now, 
maybe less, 30--in a town, little sleepy town in south Texas, 
Del Rio, Texas, 15,000--it's 35,000 people, 15,000 Haitian 
migrants showed up and claimed asylum. They'd been living in 
South America for the past previous few years. And so clearly 
they had transited a safe third country.
    Would eliminating the ability of individuals to transit a 
safe third country to qualify for asylum in the United States, 
would that help address some of the--just the sheer volume that 
we're seeing these days and act perhaps as a deterrent that 
would discourage people without legitimate claims from showing 
up at the border?
    Mr. Stimson. Thank you for your question, Senator Cornyn. 
Yes, of course. And I would add that 12(b)(6) and judgment on 
the pleadings is due process, as I explained at length in my 
written testimony.
    And so the notion that a case with no merit whatsoever 
needs to languish for 3 years in a court system where people 
with legitimate asylum claims--who we can all agree need to 
have their cases heard and they need to be granted asylum--it's 
not fair to them.
    And so, 12(b)(6) and judgment on the pleadings is part of 
the due process that we afford in all State and Federal courts.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. Senator Hirono.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for holding this 
hearing.
    Before I proceed with my opening, I just would like to 
clarify a few things. For example, according to the Cato 
Institute, U.S. citizens were 89 percent of those convicted of 
fentanyl trafficking in 2022--93 percent of fentanyl seizures 
happened at legal crossings or interior checkpoints.
    In other words, none of the fentanyl coming into our 
country are not by so-called illegal immigrants, but by U.S. 
citizens.
    Also, this whole notion of all these people who don't even 
qualify for asylum clogging the system, the fact is detained 
individuals with attorneys, with attorneys--that is the 
critical point here--that people who have attorneys are 10.5 
times more likely to be granted relief. So it is when they have 
attorneys that they can proceed with their asylum claims.
    Our immigration system is complicated enough as it is. How 
are people who have language issues and other issues even 
supposed to come forward with their legitimate asylum claims if 
they can't even figure out what's supposed to happen?
    So this idea that there are all these people clogging the 
system, you know, we should be more concerned, I would say, 
with providing lawyers for these claimants.
    And I particularly want to focus on what happens to 
unaccompanied children who don't have lawyers. And I've 
witnessed immigration proceedings and led a bipartisan 
congressional delegation to border facilities in Texas.
    While there, I saw that the Government is always 
represented by counsel in these proceedings. Or maybe not if 
they don't bother to even show up anymore.
    But there is no guarantee that children will also have a 
lawyer. And this is alarming because children are some of the 
most vulnerable people in our immigration system.
    I've heard from advocates, including Mr. McKinney today, 
who've shared stories of children going through the process, 
including a 4-year-old child whose attorney had to describe the 
immigration process using a comic book. As a 4-year-old, the 
child wasn't able to sign his name to the documents and instead 
had to make a squiggle mark.
    Or a 2-year-old who was so young that when the lawyer 
visited her, the child was in a playpen. When the 2-year-old 
saw the lawyer, she tried to give the attorney her teddy bear. 
The attorney tried to use a cartoon book to explain what was 
happening, but eventually had to use toys instead.
    Were it not for the many volunteer attorneys who 
represented them, these children or these babies often would've 
been expected to represent themselves in court with the rest of 
their lives hanging in the balance.
    It is objectively ludicrous. Not to mention, I would say, 
inhumane. These are just the stories we're aware of. Nearly 
half of all unaccompanied children go into the immigration 
court without a lawyer. For every child who is lucky enough to 
be represented by an attorney, another is left to fend for 
themselves.
    But setting aside the principles of due process, fairness, 
or even the fact that giving children an attorney is just a 
humane thing to do, the data itself supports the idea that 
children should be given lawyers. And that's why we should 
increase the chances of children being granted relief by 
providing them attorneys at an earlier point.
    It reduces waste by streamlining proceedings. It presents 
clear materials to the court, and ensures that children show up 
for their hearings. Children cannot represent themselves in 
court. It's that simple. And to give the judges more authority 
to just basically toss out hundreds of thousands of cases, is 
not the answer.
    And that's why I have introduced the Fair Day in Court for 
Kids Act, which would provide unaccompanied children with legal 
representation when they go through the process earlier in the 
process.
    So Mr. McKinney, why is having an attorney so crucial for 
unaccompanied children?
    Mr. McKinney. Thank you, Senator Hirono, and thank you for 
your efforts in this arena. Briefly put, because many, most of 
these children have viable claims before the immigration courts 
and/or other agencies, from what I see, unaccompanied children 
have often been neglected, abused, or abandoned by one or both 
biological parents, and could qualify for relief, called 
Special Immigrant Juvenile Status, in this country.
    But navigating that often requires a State custody 
proceeding as a prerequisite to seeking that relief. If you're 
unrepresented, the children--child's not going to know about 
this. And not to mention the asylum claims coming from our 
hemisphere right now, it's just horrific. So we need to do more 
to make sure those kids are represented.
    Senator Hirono. So I heard the number 300,000 unaccompanied 
children are in the system. It's just pretty horrifying to me 
that they are expected to go through a very complicated, 
complex--I'm repeating myself--system without lawyers. Thank 
you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. Senator Blackburn.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank you, 
to each of you, for being here.
    I think everyone's been horrified by what we have seen in 
Israel over the last few days, and we've also recognized that 
there is a direct threat to the Homeland when you look at what 
is happening at that southern border. And I had pulled some 
numbers.
    Border agents apprehended 19 Iranians and 17 Syrians since 
last Monday. That's absolutely astounding. That is since last 
Monday.
    And there are over 260 individuals on the Terrorist Watch 
List that have been apprehended at the southern border. And 
there can be no doubt that President Biden's open border has 
created the perfect storm for terrorists because it makes for 
easy entry.
    So, Mr. Stimson, I want to come to you on that, given that 
you've had a role previously in your life over at DOD. And when 
you look at these persons, the thousands of persons of interest 
that have come to the border, when you look at the ones that 
are on the Terrorist Watch List, when you look at individuals 
that are in that unknown got-away category, I--I want you to 
talk for a little bit about what you see as the concern on the 
stark rise of individuals coming across that border that are on 
that Terrorist Watch List.
    I--when you look at the fact that in 2019, we had zero come 
across, and then in 2021, the number upped, and it's upped 
again. If you'll address that, please.
    Mr. Stimson. Thank you, Senator Blackburn. You're referring 
to my time as Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary----
    Senator Blackburn. Yes.
    Mr. Stimson [continuing]. In charge of detainee policy in 
the Bush administration. And I've been in the room in the same 
facility as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of 9/11, and 
the formerly held CIA detainees who are now currently housed at 
Gitmo.
    They have a saying, ``We have''--``You have watches, we 
have calendars.'' They take a long view of how they're going to 
destroy this country. And I'm gravely concerned with this 
porous border. We don't know what we don't know. We don't know 
how many we didn't catch who came to this country.
    We've seen this rise of anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism in 
this country, after the Hamas savages did what they did to the 
people and children and women in Israel.
    And so there's no doubt in my mind--this is based on my 
hunch, I have no classified information or access to that 
anymore in my current job--that there are bad actors in this 
country, and they came through the border. And so I think we 
should be open-eyed and clear-eyed about that going forward.
    Senator Blackburn. Well, and I think that Director Wray's 
warning potential Hamas attacks on the Homeland should be 
something that causes us all pause as we look at what is 
happening here.
    I want to touch with you on the trafficking of children at 
the southern border and the crisis that that has presented us 
with.
    I have been appalled that this administration removed DNA 
testing at the border--45-minute test. And when we did it, we 
found that a third of the children were being trafficked. And 
now we find out that the children that DHS has in cus--or 
should have had in custody out of the 335,000, they've lost 
85,000 of those children. They do not know where they are. They 
don't know if they are dead or alive, and/or if they're being 
placed into sex trafficking, labor, gangs, things of that 
nature.
    We also know that DOJ indicated that over a 10-year period, 
46 percent of the UACs disappeared before their hearings, and 
they failed to fulfill that Notice to Appear. And that's over 
half of the almost 50,000 children given Notices to Appear that 
have gone missing before their court date. So isn't it 
possible, or even likely that a number of these children who 
have failed to appear in court have been trafficked or 
exploited?
    Mr. Stimson. I think it's hard to disagree with that 
statement. And, you know, I, like everyone here to the left and 
my right, think that young kids in any court proceeding, 
whether it's criminal or otherwise, should have an attorney, 
especially one trained in forensic speaking at a child 
appropriate level.
    The question is, who pays? And I think we have differences 
of opinion on that. But I think the fate of many of these 
children is not good.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. I do want to acknowledge other 
Members have come and gone, with other Committees in meetings 
this morning. So not sure whether or not Senator Tillis, 
Senator Booker, Senator Klobuchar, or others will return.
    But in the meantime, we do have additional questions. We'll 
start with the second round here.
    Now, over the years, Attorneys General from both parties 
have used a procedure called self-certification to influence 
and change immigration law.
    The Trump administration used self-certification a record 
17 times, including to restrict asylum eligibility and strip 
immigration judges of authority to decide when to put an end or 
to pause a case.
    In fact, former Attorney General Barr even used self-
certification to reopen a 14-year-old asylum case, and, as if 
that wasn't concerning enough, self-referred and immediately 
reviewed a case relevant to oral arguments taking place before 
the Supreme Court, just 5 days later.
    After the Biden administration took office, Attorney 
General Garland has used self-certification to vacate or 
reverse decisions that did not fit with its policy objectives.
    Question for Judge Tsankov. Can you discuss how self-
certification cases can affect non-citizens trying to navigate 
the process, and also how self-certification impacts your work 
as a judge?
    Judge Tsankov. Thank you for that question.
    So as we know, immigration judges decide their cases based 
on precedent decisions. And the precedent that we follow is 
issued by the Board of Immigration Appeals, any Attorney 
General decisions, and the Federal courts.
    So when a new Attorney General comes into office, they have 
the authority to certify cases to themselves and essentially 
rewrite the presiding law that we then all apply.
    One Attorney General might interpret a clause expansively, 
another restrictively. So the IJs are then bound by that new 
precedent.
    Now, this creates uncertainty throughout all of the 
parties--throughout the entire system, and all of the parties 
that are appearing before us.
    It also creates incentives to appeal unfavorable rulings, 
because an unfavorable ruling today, based on the law as it 
stands today, might be more favorable a few years down the road 
when a new Attorney General is appointed. This results in 
remands, which burdens the court and expands the backlog.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. I also want to bring in Ms. 
Gambler here for a minute on issues of management and the 
backlog.
    Now, thanks in large part, to persistent under-resourcing, 
as compared to other immigration enforcement agencies, the 
courts have long struggled to keep up with the number of cases 
referred to them by DHS.
    The court backlog has grown consistently since 2007, as 
you've laid out. It doubled under the previous administration, 
and further increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, while many 
courts were physically closed.
    Despite a record couple of years of case completions under 
the current administration, the court backlog is now a little 
over 2 million cases and growing. I want to afford you an 
opportunity to share what steps could EOIR take to help address 
the backlog.
    Ms. Gambler. Thank you, Chair. We think it's critically 
important for EOIR to address the recommendations that GAO has 
made to it over the years. Those recommendations are really 
designed to help improve the management and thus help EOIR 
improve the efficiency of court operations.
    And there's a particular recommendation that I would like 
to highlight that, that is long-standing.
    And that is the need for EOIR to develop a strategic 
workforce plan. That is important because that type of 
workforce planning efforts helps an agency identify what gaps 
and skills they need to have in their workforce, how they're 
going to fill any skill and competency gaps they have, and then 
monitor progress in doing that.
    A strategic workforce plan also helps an agency be 
positioned then to speak with Congress about what the resource 
needs are and how the agency will go about meeting those 
resource needs.
    So this is a long-standing recommendation that GAO has made 
to EOIR--we made it back in 2017. It's actually a priority 
recommendation, and we think it's critically important that 
EOIR take action to address that and work on getting a 
strategic workforce plan in place.
    Chair Padilla. Okay. And in the spirit of trying to address 
the backlog, you know, I keep coming back to the recommendation 
Mr. Stimson has offered. The reference to the, whether it's 30-
to-70, the 20-to-80, the ratio of successful versus 
unsuccessful claims. It can change over time. It changes region 
to region, across the country.
    But to suggest that, well, it's just simply a clogged 
system. You know, if you can quickly, easily just remove cases 
without merit and be able to focus the system on those that 
have more merit.
    Question, actually, for Judge Tsankov, you're a natural 
judge. You deal with this. Are unsuccessful cases all 
meritless, frivolous? Are there maybe a percentage that are 
sort of close calls and tougher to distinguish? How could you, 
with the magic wand just get rid of 70, 80 percent? Or is there 
a true due process here that we need to keep in mind?
    Judge Tsankov. Senator Padilla, you raise such a good 
point, and the way you've articulated, I think, is very, very 
helpful.
    As the judge, you have to look at all of the evidence 
that's been provided. Now, for example, a case may end up being 
denied because a respondent filed their application for relief 
a year and 1 day later than the application was required to be 
filed. You know, you must file within 1 year of arrival. But 
they want to make a valid argument as to why they missed that 
deadline.
    You, as the judge, might in the end decide it's not valid, 
but they have the right to make that--to present that argument. 
And those are, you know, they're sincere, sincere arguments 
that have to be addressed. That is the way that we run our 
system. Thank you.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. Senator Cornyn.
    Senator Cornyn. Mr. McKinney, I mean, the story you told 
about the two young children from South America, right, is 
certainly heartbreaking. How did they get here? Did their 
parents have to pay money for them to make their way to the 
border, to the United States?
    Mr. McKinney. Honestly--it's Central American, Senator 
Cornyn.
    I honestly don't remember, but I would concede this point, 
I assume so. I--I assume----
    Senator Cornyn [continuing]. These--the cartels----
    Mr. McKinney [continuing]. Not--and I don't----
    Senator Cornyn [continuing]. The cartels don't----
    Mr. McKinney [continuing]. And not the parents----
    Senator Cornyn [continuing]. The cartels don't work for 
free. Do they?
    Mr. McKinney. No.
    Senator Cornyn. I mean, they're the ones who are 
participating in the smuggling of people to the border, 
including these unaccompanied children.
    Mr. McKinney. Yes, as----
    Senator Cornyn. The parents--or somebody's paying money to 
get them here. My point is, it is heartrending to consider the 
circumstances of those children. But let's say of the 300,000 
children that are currently in the United States unaccompanied, 
are taxpayers supposed to pay the tab?
    Mr. McKinney. For their representation, Senator?
    Senator Cornyn. Yes.
    Mr. McKinney. It's AILA's position that the Federal 
Government should provide representation----
    Senator Cornyn. That's the taxpayer. Right?
    Mr. McKinney. That is the taxpayer where, where the 
respondent is indigent. So we don't carve out children, 
although we appreciate and believe that all children should 
have representation. To us, to the American Immigration Lawyers 
Association, the key distinction is indigency.
    Senator Cornyn. Well, if the parents or an adult pays a 
human smuggler $5,000 to get them to the border, I guess you 
could say the child is indigent and taxpayers should pay for a 
lawyer. But it seems a little--a little odd to me that the 
taxpayers should be on the hook for that.
    Let me just ask Ms. Gambler. I think there's just a lot of 
confusion about the numbers of people showing up at the border 
and what the different status is. You authored an excellent 
report called, ``The Notice to Report in Parole + ATD 
Processes.'' What's ATD?
    Ms. Gambler. That stands for Alternatives to Detention, 
Senator.
    Senator Cornyn. Okay. So let me just see if I can 
summarize, and you can tell me if I'm close or I'm off the 
target. So people--there are people who show up and they claim 
asylum at the border. Correct?
    Ms. Gambler. Right. At the border, they could be making a 
claim to fear.
    Senator Cornyn. And there's another category of people who 
show up who make no claim--credible claim of fear, but who are 
being released into the interior of the United States under 
something called parole. Is that correct?
    Ms. Gambler. That's right. According to our report, for a 
period of time, the Department of Homeland Security was 
processing some individuals who were encountered at the border 
under a program called Parole + ATD. So they were--those 
individuals were paroled into the United States and placed into 
the Alternatives to Detention program, which is a program to 
monitor individuals who are not being detained, and who will be 
in immigration proceedings.
    Senator Cornyn. And those are--those are people who haven't 
made an asylum claim at that point. Correct?
    Ms. Gambler. They--it--I think it was for individuals who 
were being--for whom DHS was making the decision to parole them 
into the country as sort of their processing pathway.
    Senator Cornyn. Yes, yes. And they're given an--are they 
told to appear at an ICE office or something for a legal 
proceeding? Or are they just released into the countryside?
    Ms. Gambler. So when we issued that report, Senator, we 
were looking at the use of the Parole + ATD program for family 
units. And under that program, the head of the family, the head 
of household, was enrolled in the Alternatives to Detention 
program. And then the members of the family were instructed to 
report to an ICE field office at a later date to be further 
processed and get that Notice to Appear to be enrolled in 
immigration proceedings.
    Senator Cornyn. So those people haven't even started the 
process in the judge's court yet.
    Ms. Gambler. For individuals who have not yet reported to 
an ICE office or for whom ICE has not yet issued a Notice to 
Appear, they have not been charged and thus are not in 
immigration proceedings.
    Senator Cornyn. And you're aware of the fact that the Biden 
administration has said, if you come from 4 Central American 
countries, up to 30,000 people will be admitted each month from 
those 4 countries under sort of a preferential pro--under a 
parole program. Right?
    Ms. Gambler. We are aware of that, but those----
    Senator Cornyn. That's----
    Ms. Gambler [continuing]. Parole programs were not the 
subject of our review.
    Senator Cornyn [continuing]. 360,000 people a year, 
potentially. Right?
    Ms. Gambler. Right. We're aware of those programs, but 
those weren't the subject of our review.
    Senator Cornyn. Right. Well, and that's really my point. 
There's a whole lot of different sort of buckets to look at 
here. Some people claiming asylum who get a Notice to Appear in 
front of the judge's court, people who show up and are told to 
go report to ICE in the interior of the United States, and then 
to begin that process, even though they haven't claimed asylum 
at the time they're at the border.
    And so the numbers that we've heard about overwhelming the 
immigration judges, their dockets, don't even include those 
people who have not been given a Notice to Appear. The ones 
that you wrote your report about.
    Ms. Gambler. That's right. Individuals who have not been 
issued to--a Notice to Appear, which is the charging document, 
would not be in formal removal proceedings.
    Senator Cornyn. And eventually they'll end up, if they show 
up, which many of them do not, if they show up and actually do 
report to an ICE office, then you'd have to add those numbers 
on top of the numbers that we've talked about earlier that will 
be added to the judges and other judges' immigration court 
dockets. Right?
    Ms. Gambler. That's right. Once they're issued a Notice to 
Appear, then they would be formally placed in removal 
proceedings and be part of the pending caseload for EOIR.
    Senator Cornyn. Thank you very much. Thanks for your 
indulgence, Mr. Chairman. Thank you.
    Chair Padilla. Every chance I get. Senator Welch.
    Senator Welch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I'm going to thank 
the panel of witnesses, as well.
    We'll start with you, Judge Tsankov. The backlog is--the 
numbers are enormous right now, and Senator Cornyn was pointing 
out that it doesn't even include some folks who, because of the 
special program, don't go to court. But what effect would it 
have if Congress increased funding for border enforcement 
without meaningful increase for the judicial function?
    Judge Tsankov. I think that would just grow the backlog 
further. Because the more cases that are placed in proceedings, 
if you don't have a judge there to schedule the hearing within 
a few months, or, you know, within a year, the cases really 
are--the docket's just going to expand.
    And I also think that it has a severe impact on the quality 
of due process that we're providing. Because if parties can't 
actually have their case heard in an expeditious manner, I 
don't think they have confidence in the system----
    Senator Welch. Mm-hmm.
    Judge Tsankov [continuing]. That their cases will be heard 
and treated fairly.
    Senator Welch. Can you just outline for me, since I haven't 
been in immigration court, from start to finish, how long a 
case takes once it does get on the docket, or get on your 
schedule?
    Judge Tsankov. So I have about maybe 3,700 cases or so on 
my docket.
    And the case will initially be scheduled through a round 
robin by the court administrator onto my docket, or one of the 
other 40 or so judges at my court.
    And they'll be scheduled for a master calendar hearing. 
It's usually the intake day where maybe 40, 50, 80, 90, 100 
people will come into the courthouse and I'll provide them with 
information about their rights and advise them they can seek 
representation.
    The case will then--they frequently will say, I'd like some 
additional time to have representation. We reset their case to 
another hearing, usually about 4 months or 5 months away. And 
at that hearing, they're usually represented.
    Sometimes--unfortunately, this happens quite often--
sometimes people do retain outside counsel. The attorney will 
then handle the pleadings by paper and tell the court, here's 
the application for relief, do away with that second hearing, 
just schedule me for my merits hearing, which we then do.
    And so--and if it's in the fast format like that, I'd say 
it might take a year and a half. If it's in a slower format, 
with a few delays to seek representation, maybe that's 2\1/2\ 
to the 3 years.
    Senator Welch. So then, when you actually have the hearing, 
how long does the hearing take?
    Judge Tsankov. The actual hearing--it depends on how--well, 
let's say it--I always set hearings for about an hour and a 
half. Many cases can be finished in that period of time, and I 
find that's efficient to do 4 trials.
    But if they need more time, I just reset--I code it a 13, 
and reset it to another day for additional testimony.
    Senator Welch. Okay. But the average actual ``in court 
before you'' time, once you get to the hearing, is about an 
hour and a half?
    Judge Tsankov. I'd say that's, that's fair.
    Senator Welch. Mr. McKinney, you do a lot of this. Does 
that sound about right?
    Mr. McKinney. Thank you, Senator. Yes, it does sound 
right--right on the money. The immigration judges in Charlotte 
typically schedule hearings for about 90 minutes. That takes 
care of most of my cases.
    But there are several cases with more complex issues, legal 
issues that require additional time----
    Senator Welch. Okay. Let me ask you----
    Mr. McKinney [continuing]. And they drag on.
    Senator Welch. Let me move to another question. You know, 
there's a--it takes a long time. You come in here and the 
backlog means that people are here for a long time, and you 
have been dealing with clients who have to be in this limbo 
period.
    And some folks think it's really important to let people 
get to work right away. A lot of folks who oppose that or are 
apprehensive that that's just encouraging more people to come 
in and put the additional burden on.
    Just--can you tell me what challenges your clients face to 
just make it through the day and the week and the month, and 
what, if anything, you'd recommend that would help in that 
interim between when they arrive and when they get their 
hearing?
    Mr. McKinney. A key part of the resource problem and 
representation problem, to your point, Senator, is at the very 
beginning.
    Now the law provides that an asylum seeker cannot obtain 
employment authorization for 6 months. There are also extensive 
delays within USCIS right now regarding the issuance of work 
permits for those parolees.
    Senator Welch. So how long does it take for somebody to get 
that period? Is it 6 months or does it actually take a lot 
longer?
    Mr. McKinney. It is, as of late, it's getting down to about 
6 months, but it has, over the last year, been much, much 
longer, Senator.
    Senator Welch. Okay. So what would help there?
    Mr. McKinney. The administration stepping up its efforts to 
get these applications processed and get those cards issued. 
Because that's a win-win, not just for the asylum seeker or the 
respondent, but also for those local communities that are 
supporting these numbers.
    Senator Welch. Okay. Thank you. I yield back. Thank you, 
Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you, Senator Welch. Senator Cornyn.
    Senator Cornyn. Mr. Kinney, I just wanted to ask you, maybe 
in your individual capacity or on behalf of the Immigration 
Lawyers Association that you represent, what would be your 
position if Congress said, ``If you transit a safe third 
country, that you can't qualify for asylum in the United 
States'' ? Because the whole premise, it seems to me, of asylum 
is that you have a credible fear of persecution based on some 
classification or some condition. And if you're living or 
transiting through a safe third country, it would seem 
logically that you would not be able to prove you have a 
credible fear at that location. What's your view?
    Mr. McKinney. Thank you, Senator. That is already part of 
the law. So when I've met with, to your point earlier with 
Haitians that have lived in Brazil, when Brazil extended a 
lifeline to Haiti about 10 years ago or so, we've had several 
Haitians go from Haiti to Brazil, but encounter their own 
problems there and then make it to our shores requesting 
relief.
    So----
    Senator Cornyn. They lack the credible proof----
    Mr. McKinney [continuing]. The fact that they lived in 
Brazil was already a problem. It's a problem for temporary 
protective status. It's a problem for asylum. Re--settling in a 
third country creates a major, major obstacle to asylum relief.
    Senator Cornyn. Assuming that that is being enforced.
    Mr. McKinney. And that's why we have our courts, Senator. 
Because they do just that.
    Senator Cornyn. Well, if you're lucky enough to wait around 
10 years, or 3, or 4, or 5 years to get a hearing. Thank you 
for that.
    Chair Padilla. And that's sort of a good reminder of the 
point of the hearing today.
    Yes, a lot of elements to our immigration system working, 
not working, that's an ongoing debate and frustration. The 
focus today have been on this court's process, and we can talk 
about the inputs, we can talk about the backlogs, and the wait 
times, etc.
    We have focused a lot on the need for additional capacity. 
We've talked a lot about the need--the judges' workload. And I 
just want to remind us that from Fiscal Year 2014 to Fiscal 
Year 2023, we actually more than doubled the number of judges 
from 249 to more than 650. Thanks, in large part, to EOIR's 
repeated asks to Congress for additional judges.
    But at the same time, EOIR has been criticized for failing 
to hire sufficient numbers of support staff for those judges. 
And from today's testimony we hear that that support staff is 
also desperately needed.
    Judge Tsankov, just briefly, I've asked a lot of very long 
questions, but just briefly, why are support staff so critical 
to you, your role, and your job, and the efficiency of the 
courts?
    Judge Tsankov. I could not do my job without the few 
support staff that I do have. They're phenomenal working so 
hard. I sometimes get messages from them at 8 o'clock at night.
    We need our legal staff, legal assistants to notify the 
parties when hearings are scheduled to make sure that the 
hearing notices get sent out to Mr. McKinney, so he comes to 
court on that day at the right time.
    We need them to, when Mr. McKinney files documents before 
the court, to make sure that those documents get put in the 
right file, so I see them when I hold my hearing a few months 
down the road.
    We need them to send out their judicial orders. You know, 
we have a lot of paper files, so that means that those orders 
have to be sent out by mail. They take care of all of that.
    We also need them to be there to answer the phone when 
unrepresented litigants call with questions, ``How do I file 
this document? ''
    We also need our judicial law clerks to assist us with 
legal research on the very difficult questions. Not maybe the 
cases that are just--that take 90 minutes, but the ones that 
are highly complex with novel questions of law. So we need 
them.
    Chair Padilla. These are great examples, and descriptive of 
what true courts should be.
    We've talked earlier in the hearing about the independence 
or the need to strengthen the independence of immigration 
courts.
    We referenced how both Democratic and Republican 
administrations have used immigration courts to influence 
immigration law and implement--change or implement immigration 
policy and priorities.
    You know, we've heard over the years the creation of 
accelerated or dedicated or rocket dockets to prioritize 
certain types of cases. The imposition of case quotas. We've 
talked already about self-certification.
    Judge, back to you. Why are immigration courts so 
vulnerable to political interference? And how would truly 
independent immigration courts address some of these concerns?
    Judge Tsankov. I think that the source of the challenge 
that we have, in terms of this vulnerability regarding 
independence, is the fact that we're housed within the U.S. 
Department of Justice. Successive Attorney Generals have the 
authority to recertify cases to themselves. It changed the law. 
All of that results in expanded case dockets.
    But in addition, when the Attorney General has that power 
to essentially implement the law enforcement agenda of the 
executive branch, that impacts our dockets, and creates 
concerns in terms of lengthy delays for hearings that need to 
be handled in an expeditious manner and due process provided to 
them.
    But also, it causes real challenges for perceptions about 
fairness in our system.
    And so, the other thing that we see quite often is that 
each new administration has different docketing priorities. And 
that shuffling of the docket results in judges being, in one 
administration, sent to the border and their home court dockets 
languish for extended periods of time.
    So it's the docket shuffling and the issue with the 
changing caselaw that I think is the most problematic for our 
court.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you. Now before moving to close 
today's hearing, I do want to end with one last question to put 
to the human element back, front and center--question for Mr. 
McKinney. We talked about the backlogs, causes of the backlogs, 
recommendations how to address the backlogs. What impact does 
the backlog, as it exists today, have on you and your clients?
    Mr. McKinney. It's significant, Senator. Because I think 
everyone here involved, all the stakeholders involved are 
searching to strike the right balance.
    Speeding up leads to conveyor belt judges--I mean, excuse 
me, conveyor belt justice. Judges are not machine operators and 
my clients are not cogs. If we go too fast, you end up with 
respondents that are unrepresented with too few resources to 
put on a meaningful case. If we go too slow, the evidence gets 
stale and witnesses disappear.
    And that's why the immigration court system that we have, 
EOIR, needs to be given sufficient resources to meaningfully 
and fairly dispose of this huge backlog that we're facing.
    Chair Padilla. Thank you, thank you.
    Before I begin our close of today's hearing, I do want to 
take a moment to respond to the statistics on the number of 
people who qualify for asylum. We've heard a lot of different 
numbers today, but I want to enter into the record data from 
EOIR that shows that in Fiscal Year 2022 and 2023, immigration 
judges granted asylum in actually more than 40 percent of 
cases.
    And I also just want to reaffirm the bedrock principle of 
due process and the fact that seeking asylum is legal under the 
law--not automatically granted, but it is lawful to seek 
asylum.
    Also, everyone who comes to claim asylum deserves a fair 
shot to prove whether they qualify under the laws, including 
safe third country provisions.
    However, the only country with which the U.S. has a safe 
third agreement currently is Canada.
    So before we conclude, I also want to submit a couple of 
documents into the record, including statements from the 
Federal Bar Association, KIND, and the AFL-CIO. We will do so, 
without objection.
    [The information appears as submissions for the record.]
    Chair Padilla. Others can be submitted. The deadline for 
submitting statements will be 1 week from today. The record 
will close 1 week from today.
    And so, as we move to conclude this hearing, I want to, 
again, thank Senator Cornyn, as well as today's witnesses, for 
being with us. Did you have any closing statements here before 
I--okay.
    So the testimony heard today paints a picture of an 
immigration court system that is at risk of failing both the 
non-citizens in the removal proceedings, as well as the 
American people having an independent judiciary, one that 
delivers timely and fair decisions to all those who come before 
it, is a bedrock principle of our American democracy.
    Yet, as we heard today, by failing to come together to help 
relieve our overburdened immigration courts, Congress is 
guaranteeing immigration courts continue to see mounting cases, 
extended wait times, and a lack of due process. There's a clear 
need for reform.
    Over the last several years, I've been encouraged to see 
the Biden administration take several steps to reduce case 
backlogs, to return autonomy to immigration judges, and to 
provide counsel for non-citizens in removal proceedings.
    But administrative action alone is not enough. As we know, 
in many instances, an efficient and fair American immigration 
court can truly be the difference between life and death.
    Just look at the mass exodus of Venezuelans fleeing severe 
economic hardship and repression in their home country. Based 
on a disappointing decision by this administration, the fate of 
Venezuelans who risk being deported to a country our own 
Government has labeled unsafe, now hangs in the balance of our 
immigration courts.
    It's our moral responsibility to give these courts the 
resources that they need. But to begin with, it's clear that 
fixations on solely our southern border won't solve our 
problems. Yes, it's part of the overall process, but that alone 
will not solve our problems.
    And avoiding the problem at hand by investing in other 
immigration enforcement agencies won't cut down the backlogs.
    For years, funding for ICE and CBP has grown dramatically 
while the immigration courts have remained underfunded and 
understaffed. The results--backlogs continue to grow. It's not 
that complicated. It's simple cause and effect.
    It's clear we must surge resources to hire support staff 
for immigration judges, and invest in technology and resources 
needed to bring our courts into the 21st century.
    And in order to limit further political interference in our 
immigration courts, again, by both Republican and Democratic 
administrations, we also have to begin to think about more 
comprehensive reforms.
    We can create an independent immigration arbiter by 
establishing Article I immigration courts--just as Congress has 
established independent courts for specialized areas of Federal 
law, like the U.S. Tax Court.
    And finally, we cannot have a truly fair immigration court 
system until every respondent has a right to legal 
representation. Not only will universal representation give 
immigrants the best chance to receive fair adjudication, as 
we've heard today, it also increases attendance rate at 
hearings and increases efficiency in court proceedings. And 
it's the right thing to do.
    Now, I don't suggest that any of this will be easy. Years' 
worth of inaction in Congress has created the uphill battle 
before us. But preserving those inherently American principles 
of fairness, timeliness, and independence in our court systems, 
relies on our ability to come together, Republicans and 
Democrats, to improve this system for everyone.
    I look forward to working with my colleagues to do just 
that. Once again, I want to thank you all for being here. And 
with that, this hearing is adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 11:40 a.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
    [Additional material submitted for the record follows.]
    

                            A P P E N D I X

Submitted by Chair Padilla:

  American Bar Association (ABA), statement.......................    94

  American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial 
    Organizations (AFL-CIO), statement............................   100

  Federal Bar Association (FBA), statement........................   102

  Kids in Need of Defense (KIND), letter..........................   104

  Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) Immigration 
    Court Asylum Decisions, graph.................................   109

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              Responses of Jeremy L. McKinney to Questions
                     Submitted by Senator Klobuchar

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              Responses of Hon. Mimi Tsankov to Questions
                     Submitted by Senator Klobuchar

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